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| Washington
Post |
May
18, 2003 |
"You
Call This Relief? I Don't."
By John O. Fox
Tax breaks—you've gotta love 'em, don't you? Washington sure
thinks so. Our lawmakers keep promising us
more of them, even if it means adding further confusion to our already
monstrously complicated tax laws. Will nothing stop those people?
My favorite tax treat this year is President Bush's controversial proposal
to eliminate the corporate dividend tax. Here's a real winner! It aims
to redress the "wrong" of taxing corporate profits twice—once
when they're earned by the corporation and again when the stockholder
gets them. And Congress is ready with the knife—the same Congress
that refuses to eliminate a far more common double tax: the income tax
we pay on the portion of our wages that goes to pay Social Security
taxes. Apparently stockholders are more aggrieved by double taxation
than American workers are.
Congress isn't much daunted, though. Sure, the Senate's watered-down
version of the dividend tax plan in the $350 billion tax cut it approved
last Thursday is only a partial victory for Bush: The tax would be reduced
for one year, eliminated for three years, then reinstated. But the bill
will go to conference with the House, and odds are high we're going
to end up with a significant cut in dividend taxes over the long haul,
if they're not eliminated entirely.
At least this relief will generate a bonanza of jobs, though. No, it's
not going to jump-start the economy. But I can promise that if it goes
into effect, it will guarantee thousands of new jobs for accountants
and auditors. Why? Because allocating profits among all of a corporation's
stock-holders, and notifying every stockholder of the portion of his
dividend that is taxable or tax-exempt, will be nothing short of an
accounting nightmare. Stockholders, be warned: After you get billed
for the additional tax-preparation fees this legislation will spawn,
you might wish Congress had adjourned for the summer.
But it won't. It's determined to stay and ram through more tax relief—whether
that's good for us or not. You've got to hand it to the GOP: Republicans
have done a bang-up job of convincing Americans that their government
in Washington doesn't know how to use their money wisely, and that the
best thing it can do is to give the money back—or not collect
it in the first place. And most Democrats, seeing how this plays at
the voting booth, have jumped right on the bandwagon, fighting tax cuts
only at the margin. That's why the war in Congress is over how many
hundreds of billions in tax cuts should be adopted—not whether
any tax cut at all makes sense.
Our lawmakers are fully united in one respect, though: Under no circumstances
will they gather the political courage to fight the war to give Americans
what they really deserve—a reasonably simple, fair and economically
sound income tax.
It is as though Congress suffers from what I call SARIS (Self-serving
Avoidance of Reasonable Tax Simplification) syndrome. This is a highly
contagious disease, and a damaging one. It gave us all sorts of nuggets
in the massive package of tax goodies passed two years ago—like
the $3,000 deduction for education expenses. Sound good? Well, hold
on. First, it was only made available from 2002 through 2005, where-upon
it disappears. And second, if you want to determine whether you're eligible
for this itty-bitty deduction, Congress—the same Congress that
couldn't care less if wealthy homeowners deduct the interest on mortgages
of up to $1.1 million—may require you to recalculate your income
based on nine frighteningly complicated provisions in the code. That's
right, nine. Welcome to sections 86, 135, 137, 219, 221, 469, 911, 931
and 933. Saddle up, America! Dressage is a piece of cake after this
exercise.
Nutty rules like this one have left so many Americans dizzy that half
of those polled in a recent survey said either that there had not been,
or that they didn't know whether there had been, new tax legislation
in 2001. How could they forget that $300/$600 rebate?!
Single people had better start paying attention. The lawmakers' obsession
with eliminating the so-called marriage penalty–could it be because
married people tend to vote more often?—is unaccompanied by any
outrage over the singles' penalty—the obligation of millions of
single people to pay income taxes on an appallingly low level of income.
Whatever Congress ultimately decides on this year's tax package, by
ignoring tax simplification and preserving the several hundred special
relief provisions embedded in thousands of pages of tax laws, Washington
guarantees that our tax liabilities frequently will depend on our ability
to avoid taxes rather than on our ability to pay them. Consequently,
people with equal ability to pay taxes will seldom pay equally; moreover,
people with greater ability to pay will often pay less.
I'm not talking just about the rich. This is a story of low-, moderate-
and middle-income households, too. Indeed, because so much commentary
focuses on the disproportionate share of tax relief for the rich, the
public has scant information to help it understand how the tax laws
produce wildly inconsistent tax burdens for ordinary households. With
about half our individual income—a staggering $3 trillion—legally
protected from tax each year, the results could not be otherwise. A
dazzling world of special exclusions, exemptions, deferrals, deductions
and credits is accessible to many households through planning or sheer
happenstance, and is inaccessible, or barely accessible, to other households.
Yes, through the tax laws, Congress creates a society of winners and
losers.
Consider the following two hypothetical households. First there's our
single taxpayer. Let's call her Jennifer Adams. She's 33 and will earn
$11,000 this year cleaning motel rooms. She takes the bus to work because
she can't afford parking fees, rents an efficiency apartment for $400
a month, receives no work benefits beyond one week of vacation or sick
leave (her choice), pays all her health insurance premiums and out-of-pocket
health costs, and has no other income. Her modest earnings have prevented
her from saving anything for retirement.
Then there's our married couple. I've named them Tom and Grace Chance.
They're 31-year-old parents of 1-year-old twin girls. Tom will earn
$66,000 this year as a full-time associate in a national accounting
firm, plus $3,000 his employer will contribute to his 401(k) plan, to
which Tom also will contribute $6,000 out of his salary. Grace will
earn $11,000 as a part-time secretary.
It is Tom's good fortune that his employer also has a "cafeteria
plan," which offers a rich menu of opportunities for him to avoid
taxes on the portion of his wages his employer uses to pay many of his
personal expenses. This year, Tom's menu—totaling $16,000—will
cover premiums for a family health insurance policy and a disability-income
policy; out-of-pocket family medical expenses and parking expenses at
work; and $5,250 (the maximum allowed under the rules) for college courses
he is taking in late 19th-century expressionist art.
Tom and Grace own their four-bedroom house. They have mortgage interest,
property taxes and state income taxes to pay. They also make small charitable
contributions. These expenses will total $18,800 this year.
Fig.
1
CALCULATION OF JENNIFER’S INCOME TAX
Income: $11,000
Minus personal exemption ($3,050)
Minus standard deduction ($4,750)
Taxable income $3,200
Tax $320 |
Okay public. What do you think? Should Jennifer pay an income tax?
Should the Chances? If only one should pay, which one?
I hope you're sitting down. The answer is: Congress believes only
Jennifer should pay. Congress figures it's fair to tax her on her income
above $7,800 (Fig. 1, above), even though the federal poverty level
for people like her is $9,400. The Chances will be required to pay nothing
(Fig. 2, below)—zero—even though their $80,000 earnings
are more than 430 percent of the federal poverty level ($18,400) for
a family of four. In computing the Chances' taxes, I have assumed that
Congress, as proposed by both houses, will increase the child credit
this year from $600 per child to $1,000, and will increase from $12,000
to $14,000 the amount of their income subject to taxation at the marginal
rate of 10 percent. Otherwise, the Chances would have to pay $900 in
taxes, a burden Congress appears to believe they should be spared.
Fig.
2
CALCULATION OF THE CHANCES’ INCOME TAX
Income: $80,000 (salary and employer’s 401(k) contribution)
Minus employer's 401 (k) contrib. ($3,000)
Minus Tom’s 401 (k) contrib. ($6,000)
Minus Tom’s fringe benefits ($16,000)
Adjusted gross income $55,000
Minus personal exemptions ($12,200)
Minus itemized deductions ($18,800)
Taxable income $24,000
Tentative tax $3,200
Minus child credits ($2,000)
Minus child care credits ($1,200)
Net tax 0 |
I imagine you're standing on your kitchen table screaming ''Has Congress
lost its mind?!" To be fair, though, I believe that very few members
of Congress would guess that the Chances would pay nothing. The law
abounds with so many incongruities, contradictions and absurdities that
it defies reasonable predictions of who will end up paying what.
Take the 10 education subsidies Congress has randomly crafted. They
provide solid evidence of why Americans should insist that legislators
curtail their efforts to engage in social and economic engineering through
the tax laws. Rather than maximize the likelihood that people who can't
afford college will be able to attend, most of the subsidies help people
who would be likely to go to college even without the relief. For example,
the largest subsidies, which can involve tens of thousands of dollars
in tax savings, apply to wealthy parents or grandparents who stash $100,000
or more in tax-exempt state and private college plans to pay for their
children's or grandchildren's college tuitions; when the tuition is
paid, the payments are also tax-exempt. Middle-class families rarely
can set aside such large amounts. Low-income families can't afford to
set aside any amount.
A Hope Scholarship credit ($1,500) and the Lifetime Learning credit
($2,000), which President Clinton championed to help ordinary Americans
attend college, can help lower-income people who owe taxes. But for
all those households who can't afford to send a child to college and
don't owe taxes, the credits are worthless.
And then the final whammy. Economics 101 teaches that government subsidies
increase the price of the thing subsidized, in this case higher education.
People at the bottom of the income pole thereby get hit twice: They
don't get the subsidies, and their education costs are higher than they
would be if the subsidies didn't exist. The cost effect, of course,
applies to everyone, which should make us wonder if any of the education
subsidies, except those based on need, deserve to be in the laws in
the first place.
And so it goes. Tax subsidies for health insurance, housing, retirement
and most other things tend to benefit most those who need the subsidies
least, and to benefit least those who need the subsidies most, while
the subsidies themselves drive up prices.
If Congress were to vastly simplify the tax laws by providing relief
only in the most compelling cases, it could bring down tax rates for
everyone without sacrificing tax revenues. And if lawmakers stopped
trying to micromanage our behavior through the tax laws and reduced
taxes across the board, our economy would be stronger. So would the
cash-strapped IRS, which recently announced that it lacks the money
to collect $13 billion owed by taxpayers who could and would pay, if
the IRS insisted.
But suffering as it is from SARTS, Congress will not engage in the
tax war Americans deserve without strong pressure from voters. A worthy
first step might be to ask candidates to explain why a struggling single
person like Jennifer Adams should pay an income tax, while fairly comfortable
marrieds-with-children like the Chances should not. I don't know why.
Do you?
As
Clear as Mud
According
to polls, Americans are less and less trusting of government,
and sometimes there's good reason. Here's Outlook's own tax poll.
Take a look at the following examples of some of the absurdities
that grace our federal tax code, and rate them on a scale of 0-10,
with 0-3 being "crazy, "4-7 being "I can live with
that" and 8-10 "what a brilliant idea." Then add
up your score: 72 or higher means "I'd Give Them the Clothes
off My Back"; 45-71 means "Well, Maybe Just My Shirt";
27-44, I Wouldn't Let Those Guys Baby-sit My Kids, "and 0-26
"When's the Next Election?":
- Renters
may not deduct their rent. Homeowners may deduct interest on
mortgages of up to $1.1 million to buy, build or substantially
improve up to two homes, and may deduct all property taxes on
an unlimited number of personal residences
- Businesses
get faster tax write-offs for acquiring heavy, gas-guzzling
SUVs than for acquiring lighter-weight, fuel-efficient luxury
passenger vehicles.
- A sole
owner-employee of a corporation may exclude from her income
all health-insurance premiums and out-of-pocket medical expenses
paid by her corporation. If she pays them personally, she may
deduct only the amount that exceeds 7.5 percent of her income.
- A corporate
CEO incurs $5,000 in child-care expenses for her child. If her
corporation pays the expenses under a fringe-benefit plan, she
may exclude the $5,000 from income and save nearly $2,000 in
taxes. If she pays the expenses herself, the child-care credit
allows her to save only $600 in taxes.
- An elderly
couple that sells its long-held family business for a $500,000
profit must pay tax on the entire gain. A young couple may buy
and
sell an expensive home as a primary residence every two years,
each time making a profit of $500,000, and never pay any taxes
on the gains.
- A real-estate
developer may swap one property for another, over and over again,
forever deferring the tax on his gains, even if the final property
is worth millions. If he dies and bequeaths the final property
to his spouse, who then sells it for its date-of-death value,
the spouse is exempt from tax on the entire deferred gain. The
bequest is also exempt from estate taxes.
- Itemizers
who give tiny amounts to charity may deduct the full amount.
Non-itemizers who
contribute considerably more may not deduct any of their gifts.
- Itemizers
who live in a state that doesn't have an income tax but raises
revenue through a sales tax may not deduct any of the sales
tax they pay. Itemizers who live in a state that raises revenue
via an income tax may deduct all the state income taxes they
pay.
- Interest
on up to $100,000 of consumer loans may be deducted by homeowners
if they secure the loans through a mortgage on their home. No
other consumer interest may be deducted, meaning that renters
may never deduct their consumer interest, such as the interest
they pay on credit cards.
—
J.f. |
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