Tag Archives: estate tax

THE RIGHT QUESTIONS ABOUT TAXES

SOLVING THE TAX REFORM PUZZLE
SOLVING THE TAX REFORM PUZZLE

This column explores questions about tax reform that congress has ignored.

The obvious purpose of taxes is to fund government operations that we have approved through our elected officials.  The alternative is borrowing.  Debt allows us to spend money now and delay taxation to a later date – like using a credit card to pay for something when you don’t have the cash.  Later, while you pay off the credit card, you will have less money to spend.

It’s important to understand what we tax today (federal, state and local taxes combined).  36 percent of revenue comes from individual income taxes (mostly federal and state).  Another 23 percent is payroll taxes, mostly designated for Social Security and Medicare.  Investment income is exempt from payroll taxes.  Next are corporate income taxes at 11 percent, property taxes at 10 percent, sales taxes at 8 percent and everything else at 12 percent.   CLICK HERE FOR MORE INFORMATION

We generally do not tax accumulated wealth such as cash, stock, bonds, precious metals etc.  Our inheritance or estate tax applies only to amounts over $5.9 million from an individual or $11.8 million from a married couple.  We do not levy a sales tax on stocks, bonds, or other financial assets which are acquired as a source of future income.  We generally tax income from those financial assets at a lower rate than income earned from work.

Are our taxes too high? Believe it or not, our total tax burden is relatively low.  We collect 26 percent of our GDP through all forms of taxation.  The median among developed democracies is 34 percent.  Thirty nations had higher rates and four had lower rates.

Many Americans are alarmed about the decline of our middle class and the extreme difficulty of upward economic mobility.  Jobs are available but employee compensation hasn’t kept up with living costs.  This is occurring while corporate profits and the stock market set new records.  The wealthiest 0.1 percent of the American population now own as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent (which includes the entire middle class along with the poor).

Should we use tax policy to change those trends?  In his book, “Capital in the 21st Century”, Economist Thomas Piketty answers  “yes”.  He demonstrates that the rate of return on capital (accumulated wealth that is invested for profit) consistently exceeds the rate of total economic growth. That is the cause of concentration of wealth among the top 0.1 percent of the population.  To hear him explain his ideas in a TED talk, CLICK HERE

There are a number of ways to apply Piketty’s research to tax reform.  One idea is to begin charging a small excise (sales) tax on the purchase of stocks, bonds and other financial instruments.  It might be around 1 percent.  A carpenter who buys a new saw in order to earn income will pay a sales tax.  Doesn’t it seem fair that someone who buys stock in order to make money would also pay a tax?

Another idea is a tax on accumulated wealth above some preset dollar value.  Suppose that the combined value of real estate and financial assets exceeding $5 million for a family was subject to an annual tax of 1 or 2 percent.  That would generate a lot of revenue, particularly from families with net worth in the billions of dollars.  They could continue growing their fortunes by investing if they earned more than the tax rate of 1 or 2 percent.

A third idea is to tax non-work income (interest, dividends and appreciation of investments) at the same rate as wages.  Why is it right to tax income earned by labor at a higher rate than investment income?

A fourth idea is to retain the estate tax.  It allows a wealthy couple to pass on as much as $11.8 million to heirs tax-free.  That’s a very nice head-start in life for anyone.  Why is it right that those working their way up the economic ladder have payroll taxes on every dollar they earn while the children of the wealthy start with $11.8 million tax-free dollars?

If we apply the revenue generated from ideas like these to reducing payroll taxes, we can increase “take home” pay and we won’t need to reduce Social Security or Medicare benefits.  That would certainly help families on the way up with their economic climb.

None of these concepts are on the congressional tax reform agenda.  They should be explored and debated with ample public input before our tax laws are changed.

FURTHER READING:

NY Times coverage of wealth tax concept

Wikipedia wealth tax

SOURCES OF TAX REVENUE IN USA

Comparison of US taxes to other nations

US budget deficit history

Paying Donald Trump’s Taxes

“If this is what happens when you vote Republican, then why vote Republican?” – Rush Limbaugh, May 1, 2017.  It’s a good question.

The most thorough analysis to date of President Trump’s tax plan is winners in trump tax planthe Tax Policy Center’s report  on a very similar plan that he proposed last year.  It projects that the 20 percent of Americans with the lowest incomes would gain $110 annually.  The 20 percent with middle incomes would gain $1010.  The 20 percent with the highest incomes would gain $16,660.  And, most stunning of all, the one tenth of one percent of Americans with the highest incomes would save $1,066,460 every year.

That will be paid for by increasing our federal deficits and debt at the rate of more than $700 billion per year.  Every year, every American (even children who can’t vote) will become responsible for repaying $2153 in new debt. Counting principal and interest, Trump’s tax plan would burden every child born in 2017 with about $64,000 in new debt by their twenty-first birthdays.

That’s a great deal for children born into extremely wealthy families because they will get over a million dollars a year in tax savings.  But for a child born to a poor or middle class family, the debt will be a barrier to success in a nation that can’t continue living on borrowed money.  Here are a few examples of what President Trump is trying to sell us and some alternative reforms that would serve the nation better.

Trump’s plan would eliminate the estate tax.  He calls it a “death tax” and says it impedes the inheritance of small businesses and family farms.  But the estate tax only applies to assets in excess of $10.9 million passed on by a married couple (half of that for an individual).  Repealing the estate tax will allow heirs of the super-rich to receive millions of dollars as tax-free inheritances while those who work for their money pay income taxes.  This idea is the ultimate example of an entitlement mentality among American aristocracy.  If President Trump has been truthful about his net worth, the estate tax repeal will allow his heirs to receive $10 billion tax free.

How is an inheritance not income?  Some of the wealthy will argue that they already paid income taxes on the money to be passed on.  I hope that is true.  When a middle class family pays to have their home repainted, they have already paid taxes on that money.  The painter will be taxed on his income too.  Taxing earned money while not taxing inherited money – what a way for the President to treat the blue-collar workers who elected him!

President Trump wants to eliminate most itemized deductions but keep the one for mortgage interest. It serves the purpose of making home ownership easier but wealthy Americans frequently mortgage homes and use the proceeds to pay for second homes or income producing investments.  With that in mind, we should cap the size of deductible mortgages at an amount that subsidizes ownership of a nice home.  There is no justification for subsidizing million dollar mortgages.

The President wants to cap corporate taxes at 15%, which he says will encourage business expansion here by making our taxes competitive and slightly lower than other nations.  He’s right about that.  Corporations should be viewed as tax collectors not as tax payers.  They collect from customers and then pass some of their income along as taxes.

A better idea is to pass the tax liability for corporate profits (and deductions for losses) along to shareholders at whatever rate they pay on earned income.  This will allow lower-income families to invest and begin accumulating wealth while paying low or no tax.  Those with higher incomes would pay more.  Under that policy, each taxpayer would pay the same rate on wages as on investment income.

Our tax code offers more advantages for the extremely wealthy than can be covered in a column of this kind.  The Trump plan will move us further down the road toward establishment of an entitled American aristocracy – exactly the wrong direction to go if we want upward mobility into the middle class and beyond.

President Trump’s proposal is the proverbial pig wearing lipstick.  This pig would require every American to borrow money that will pay for tax cuts for the extremely wealthy.  Its lipstick, some nearly inconsequential tax cuts for the poor and middle class, is a thin disguise.

Links for additional reading:

https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/04/a-comprehensive-guide-to-donald-trumps-tax-proposal/524451/

https://www.bloomberg.com/politics/articles/2016-12-09/estate-tax-repeal-under-trump-would-benefit-president-cabinet

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/26/upshot/winners-and-losers-in-the-trump-tax-plan.html

http://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/2017/04/25/stockman-trumps-tax-plan-dead-before-arrival.html

How high are American taxes compared to other nations?  CLICK THIS LINK: https://data.oecd.org/gga/general-government-revenue.htm#indicator-chart