Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Who has the money, and who pays taxes?

We’re constantly hearing that “50% of Americans don’t pay any income tax.”  You just know that it isn’t true, and you know that everyone pays sales taxes and most everyone has payroll taxes deducted. But still, it sticks there.

It isn’t true, except for one year, 2009, after the recession hit. That was a very tough year, so it’s no surprise that the number of people exempt from income tax because of low income went way up. The info is from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities’ report, Misconceptions and Realities About Who Pays Taxes. 

CBPP points out that there were also some special tax credits that year that pushed the number even higher. According to CBPP, “In a more typical year, 35% to 40%” owe no taxes.  And federal gas taxes aren’t counted.

According to a study by the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, “the bottom fifth of households paid 16.3% of their incomes in taxes, on average, in 2010.  The second fifth paid 20.7%.” 

Here’s how the recession affected taxpayers:

Who Has All the Money?

No doubt, the top fifth almost have it all.  According to a PBS report in 2011, the top fifth now holds 84% of US wealth.  That’s not a typo, 84%.  The next fifth has 11%, the middle fifth 4%, the next fifth has 0.2% and the bottom fifth has 0.1%.   And, surprise, it is becoming more uneven all the time.

“Wealth” is assets minus liabilities, or things like land, stock, bonds, houses, and factories.  It is not the same as income, which is the number usually used by the right-wingers when complaining about taxes.  So, a look at income.

Doesn’t look good, does it. What it says, in plain terms, is that the rich get richer and the poor stay poor. And the middle class stays poor too.

In 1915, the Robber Baron days, the top 1% got 18% of the income.  Today, they get 24%.  For comparison however, I use quintiles, and offer the following from the US Census for 2010.

Income Distribution 2010001

The lowdown?  The top fifth gets 50.2% of the income, and the next fifth gets 23.4%.  Income in the fourth quintile was from $61,736 to $100,065 and the top fifth was everyone above that. For the record, the third quintile is $38,044 to $61,735, the second, $20,001 to $38,043. One fifth of us had incomes of $20,000 or less in 2010.

The top fifth paid 64.3% of federal, state, and local taxes out of their 50.2% of the income.  Doesn’t sound like a big price to pay.

tax Distribution 2010001

I hope that answers some questions.

Monday, October 03, 2011

Good jobs for everyone in America

Today, too many Americans can’t find a job, and too many jobs pay wages that don’t support a family. Our families are working harder and getting paid less, falling behind our parents' generation. While our wages are stuck in place, the super-rich are getting even richer.  And CEO campaign contributors are buying tax breaks from politicians to ship our jobs overseas, while their corporations cut our wages and benefits at home.

Look, the people who wrecked our economy should be paying for it, not profiting from it. Deregulating Wall Street and trickle-down tax cuts for the rich didn’t create jobs. Workers who get decent wages and benefits, who can support their families, who shop on Main Street – that’s who create jobs. It’s simple really: Our economy works better when every American who wants a job is working.

We can create good jobs for everyone in America, now! There is more than enough vital work to be done and Americans stand ready and eager to do it. We can rebuild our crumbling bridges and repair out-dated schools, so that our businesses will be able to get their goods to market and have an educated workforce. We can change the rules so that American manufacturers can compete fairly with China. We can keep America competitive in the 21st Century.

We can build strong communities. We can put teachers and firefighters back to work. We can help keep our families secure, by protecting Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. We can make sure that losing you job doesn’t mean losing your home. And we can pay for this by ending giveaways to Big Oil, taxing Wall Street speculation and by raising taxes on millionaires instead of giving them more tax breaks. After all, big corporations are sitting on $2 trillion in cash while laying off workers. If they won’t put Americans back to work, we will!

The choice today is crystal clear. We stand with working families and the small businesses that create two-thirds of American jobs. They stand with the Wall Street speculators and CEOs who cut our wages, crashed our economy and shipped our jobs overseas. The question we have to ask every member of Congress is: which side are you on?