Dear Mr. Philpot,
I enjoyed meeting you at the Iron County Fair on Monday, where we spoke briefly about taxes. I would like to follow up about this because I think there is a great deal of misunderstanding on the subject. As a tax preparer and political blogger, I would like to offer the following data in the hope that you will modify your position– as I wish many politicians would.
First, according to the Census Bureau, median income for American taxpayers is $51,283; Utah is slightly higher at $59,395. So half of all American (and Utah) households earn less than this figure.
IRS statistics show that only 1% of all Americans earn more than $380,384 per year. Only 10% earn $101.799 or more. So 90% of all Americans earn less than $102,000 per year. When we’re talking about the number of Americans affected by the tax rates in the upper income bracket, it is a very small number of very privileged Americans.
Of far more concern is FICA/SECA tax, which takes 15.3% of every dollar earned by both wage earners and the self-employed. The median family earning $51,000 per year would pay very little income tax (about $1,750 for a married couple with two children claiming the standard deduction and the child tax credit), but over $7,800 in FICA/SECA tax. Likewise a family struggling to get by on $20,000 would pay no income tax at all, but would lose $3,000 of its income to FICA/SECA.
Technically an employee only pays 7.65%, or half of their FICA tax, while the employer pays the other half. But anyone in business knows that the employer has to reduce salary to cover the cost of his/her employees, so FICA tax reduces disposable income by 15.3% for employees as well as the self employed. I can’t tell you how often a client has decided not to hire a part-time employee because of he cost of payroll taxes, so FICA on low-income earners discourages hiring as well.
FICA/SECA is a regressive tax. Any earnings over $106,800 are not subject to social security tax. Thus the same privileged 10% get a tax break with respect to FICA/SECA, while the rest of us, and especially the working poor, struggle to pay for a fund that will probably be broke before we ever collect.
Our government under both the Bush and Obama administrations has heavily favored the elites. Bailouts, tax cuts, tax credits, subsidies, and expenditures for the wars have given trillions to big business and their owners. Most of this has been done on credit. Both presidents gave us a few hundred dollars in tax rebates. But that doesn’t compare to the massive transfer of wealth from our Treasury to crooked bankers, sweetheart military contractors, corporate mega-farmers, Afghan warlords, and oil companies.
The national debt is perhaps the cruelest tax of all: The money supply, as represented by M-2, has grown from 4,658 billion in January 2000 to 8,611 billion in July 2010, an increase of 85%. That means 85% more dollars have been pumped into circulation, making each dollar we earn and save worth about 54 cents compared to what it was when President Bush took office ten years ago– and few of us have 85% more wealth than we did then.
There is an argument that average Americans benefit from “trickle down”– when big corporations are taxed less and subsidized more, they spend more. But looking at he state of the economy today, that’s a hard argument to support. The backbone of our economy, both nationally and in Utah, is small business. We work hard, we hire our neighbors, and we put money back into the local economy rather than shipping jobs offshore. We generally don’t earn $100,000 a year, and we generally don’t qualify for subsidies, tax credits, or even health insurance credits.
It’s been a long time since I’ve seen a President or a Congress concerned with the financial well-being of average Americans. As a nation, we’ve done quite well for the rich, but the poor is struggling and the middle class is in trouble. And the problem is not the amount of income tax we pay, it’s a government that favors the wealthy.
I hope that you will help change that.
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