The
Rich and the Poor (Part III)
Here I continue my imaginary "social engineering" of our US tax policy, to
tackle the increasingly widening gap between rich and poor. I promise this is
the end of my journey into the subject – a rather long last look, a final
outpouring. I just don’t have the stomach for any more…
I managed to find some newer IRS data summaries, these from 2002. I’ve been
playing "what-if" games with these numbers for the last week, trying to come
up with a scenario that addresses the issue in a "fairer" and "simpler" way.
(Of course, I know that what’s "fair" in my mind is absolute, satanic
Marxist anathema to others.)
I’m sure for anyone who still actually attempts to figure their own taxes,
they’d accept this statement as a truism: The tax rules in this country are
way too complicated. There has to be a better way of dealing with the
way we get funding for government services.
If you read my previous pages (here
and here) on the widening gap
between the ultra-rich and the rest of us, you’ll see why I think the
situation has gotten out of control. I won’t discuss the various theories
explaining why the increase in income inequality over the last couple of
decades has taken place, nor will I take (too many) cheap shots at the obvious
and well-documented bent of the current Administration to further enrich those
in the extreme upper echelons of wealth. Likewise, I won’t talk about the
future burden we’re placing on our children via the severe deficits we’re
running as a result of these policies. (Notwithstanding the fact that I
personally don’t have any kids to worry about, I am cognizant that
there are a lot of them out there. And I grant that there’s a chance that many
of them may someday turn into actual thinking, feeling human beings –
although often that’s a bit of a stretch for me to conceive.)
On another page, I took a first crude
cut at thinking about imaginary changes to the tax structure. That was mainly
to show what would happen if the rich were somehow made to pay their fair
lawful share of taxes. I got some satisfaction in showing how you could really
help the underclass in this society, and reduce the tax burdens of the middle
class in a truly meaningful way. I limited myself to tinkering with the
effective tax rates of each of the income groups in question. While that’s
easy for anyone to do, it lacks a certain sense of "simple elegance" and
doesn’t seem to get at the real questions: What magnitude of income disparity
are we willing to tolerate in this country? How can we make the rich more
mindful of the economic situation of the average workers that support them?
And how can we better address this issue via a simple, straightforward, and
consistent tax policy?
I think we need to somehow key the concept of taxation to how the average
person is doing at any given point in time.
In 2002, the average US adjusted gross income for all household tax
returns was $46,385. But this figure is significantly skewed by the large
inequality of wealth distribution toward the upper end of the income scale. In
data situations like this, it’s better to consider things in terms of the
median. Based on IRS data, the median household reported only about
$27,000 adjusted gross income. (To establish the median, you take the number
of all the individual tax returns received, divide by 2 -- and that’s your
median household, right in the middle of the entire tax-paying population.) So
think of your "average Joe or Jane" as the person smack-dab in the middle:
Half of everybody in the US earns less than their household, and the other
half earns more than their household.
Before you weep too hard for that guy-or-gal-in-the-middle, realize that
the lower 50% of all households paid less than 5% of total IRS tax receipts in
2002. We’ve long had a "progressive" tax structure in this land. Those of us
who are better-off accept -- some of us more grudgingly than others -- this
fiscal burden. We assign it to the providence bestowed on our lives, from
whatever beneficent, unknown source it issues. That is a good thing; it
registers a sense of social fairness that’s uniquely human, and humane. I
perceive that the ultra-rich have more recently convinced the legislative
powers-that-be (perhaps aided by political contributions and lobbying dollars)
that their particular branch of providence should be reclassified as
being exempt from this historical social pact. I cannot fathom the
epistemological bent of their argument. But I do understand how money talks.
Nevertheless, to my mind, imposing any tax at all on the lower half
of society is like beating a weary camel. So let’s go a step further. Let’s
propose here and now that there will be no tax at all on that bottom
50% group. We can certainly make up that paltry 5% somewhere along the line,
among the more fortunate members of society.
Now please internalize that 50% median income number, $27,000. In 2002, the
average taxpayer in that category paid about $1760 in taxes. Let’s use that as
a starting basis for taxation for the more privileged among us. Consider this:
How much more than $27,000 does it take to make a "good life" for you and your
family? Speaking for myself, I have a hard time imagining I could lead a good
life at 1X that base salary. I could probably do OK at 2X, if I downsized
significantly -- I would definitely have to make some budgetary sacrifices to
handle that. What’s your answer?
For the average of the top 0.1% of people filing tax returns in 2002 (about
170,000 of them), their multiple of that basic unit of income was 104X, or
$2,815,960. I think that annual income would provide a pretty darned
good life for anyone. The average of the top 2% of returns had a multiple of
19X, or about $520,000 gross income. (We’re talking close to 2.5 million
households, here. That sector actually starts at around $130,000 and Lord only
knows where it ends.) That sounds like a mighty fine life, too.
How about we say that the demarcation line for "progressivity" in taxes
starts at 3X of that median 50%-income bracket number. For purposes of
argument, I will put forth the supposition that 3 times $27,000 = $81,000 is
where "the good life" really starts. So up to 3X that reference $27,000
income, you’d pay taxes based on what the IRS took from that median-ranked
household in 2002. In other words, at any income ratio up to 3X, you’ll pay
that ratio times $1760. Anything beyond 3X, your ratio will get bumped up, to
the extent of how much beyond the "good life threshold" you’re at. It turns
out, if you make this "boost" factor 6.2 times any ratio over 3X, you’ll bring
in the same total tax receipts as the IRS did in 2002.
Notice I didn’t say anything about graduated marginal tax rates. This
scheme is based on individual household adjusted gross income, period – gross
income net of any true losses. I don’t care if the income is from
regular income or capital gains, rents, dividends or interest. No tax
loopholes, no standard or special deductions. (We do have to allow for bona
fide business expenses for non-incorporated, private businesspeople.) The
idea is, you pay on what your household nets for the year. Go ahead and
quibble about exemptions for kids, charities, and all the other things that
make tax life so complicated. I say, lose ‘em all. This whole tax scheme is
simply all about paying according to how much your income differs from the
2002 median taxpaying household. Period. It relates to the average Joe or
Jane, nothing else.
Nice thing about it is, it has a progressive result that isn’t too awfully
different than what we have in place now. There are no tax tables, no fine
print. It’s simple. Everyone uses the same three calculations:
- Get your level-of-relative-living multiplier by dividing your net income
by $27,000,
- If more than 3.0, adjust it by adding 6.2 times any part of your
multiplier over 3.0, and
- Figure your tax as your final multiplier times $1760.
If your net income was less than $27,000, don’t bother doing the math,
there’s no tax due. (But see the note below.)
Not only is this tax scheme simple, it makes everybody mindful of
how our median American is doing, and how much that ordinary citizen shares in
the overall wealth generated by our society. Also, there’s no "falling over
into" a higher tax bracket. When you get past the 3X multiple, you do start to
get exposed to the "multiplier boost" factor. But it starts slow and is a
regular, continuously linear function thereafter.
You say you’re in the ultra-rich category and want to reduce your taxes?
You can do it -- if you and your country-club cronies can figure out a way to
improve the average Joe and Jane’s lot in life. Far be it from me to tell you
how to do this, but perhaps you might want to think about giving your
bottom-level employees a decent raise for a change, or putting on some
underemployed people in your factories.
Next filing year, the IRS would keep those same base numbers, $27,000 and
$1760, in play. Except for adjusting them for inflation, they are to be
considered constants from their original point of creation, onward. The IRS
would adjust the "boost" factor to yield the same tax receipts – that too
indexed for inflation, of course. (Personally, I wouldn’t dick around with the
"boost" factor until we achieved a balanced budget.) If the median adjusted
gross income (after inflation) went up in the last tax year, the boost factor
would go down for the next -- giving the "living well" folks (those making
over 3X the median income) an automatic tax reduction. That would happen
because everyone breaking over that original base income level would start to
pay a tiny bit of taxes – since the "original median salary" on which this tax
structure is based stays fixed. But in principle, there should be a whole lot
of people paying this tiny bit more. Owing to the reduction in the boost
factor, those people with more than a 3X multiple would start to enjoy a
corresponding tax benefit – the more so, the richer they are. So the "progressivity"
of this scheme is self-limiting . But that happens only if the median
US income level rises more than inflation -- only if our median American
household regains that wonderful dream of progress and opportunity that
(before 1970) gave them succor. Could they perhaps come to believe once again
that working hard was a worthwhile endeavor?
On the other hand, if the median income falls, the well-off get
socked a bit harder – again, more so the richer they are. Remember, no one
making under the $27,000 base income point gets taxed, and if more than 50% of
the households end up under that fixed number, the top 50% (especially the
very top echelons) have to make up the difference. Is this fair? If our
average guy is suffering, why would we want to let him suffer alone? I would
submit that the very wealthy are the ones that have the most influence over
the way our business cycles churn. And if it became in their economic interest
to worry more about the median American’s lot, they might better attend their
grip on that churn!
Here’s a table showing the differences in the existing tax scheme, and the
one I "what-if’d" above. Remember, the boost factor of 6.2 comes into play on
any ratio above 3X of the median household’s (yellow) gross income. The table
includes actual IRS data from 2002 household returns. (Corporate taxes are not
dealt with here. Very complicated subject. Maybe I’ll tackle them at some
later time…)
Adjusted Gross Income Category |
Avg Gross Income |
Cumula-tive % of Returns |
Avg Tax Paid in 2002 |
Cum. % of All Tax Income |
Basic Multiple of $27,000 Income |
Boost Multiple (6.2X anything over 3X) |
New Avg Tax Paid (Multiple times $1760) |
Tax Benefit (or Penalty) |
All returns (130,076,443
total) |
46,385 |
|
6,380 |
|
|
|
6,422 |
|
No adjusted gross income |
--- |
1.3% |
0 |
0.0% |
0.0 |
0.0 |
0 |
0 |
$1 under $10,000
|
5,145 |
20.0% |
41 |
0.1% |
0.2 |
0.2 |
0 |
41 |
$10,000 under $20,000
|
14,872 |
38.0% |
465 |
1.4% |
0.5 |
0.5 |
0 |
465 |
$20,000 under $25,000 |
22,386 |
45.7% |
1,156 |
2.8% |
0.8 |
0.8 |
0 |
1,156 |
$25,000 under $30,000 |
27,401 |
52.3% |
1,759 |
4.6% |
1.0 |
1.0 |
0 |
1,759 |
$30,000 under $40,000 |
34,742 |
63.1% |
2,670 |
9.1% |
1.3 |
1.3 |
2,232 |
438 |
$40,000 under $50,000 |
44,815 |
71.2% |
4,039 |
14.3% |
1.6 |
1.6 |
2,879 |
1,160 |
$50,000 under $75,000 |
61,311 |
84.6% |
6,344 |
27.6% |
2.2 |
2.2 |
3,938 |
2,406 |
$75,000 under $100,000 |
85,911 |
91.7% |
10,673 |
39.5% |
3.1 |
3.8 |
6,757 |
3,916 |
$100,000 under $200,000 |
131,751 |
98.1% |
20,946 |
60.7% |
4.8 |
14.2 |
25,012 |
-4,066 |
$200,000 under $500,000 |
287,569 |
99.6% |
64,928 |
75.7% |
10.5 |
49.5 |
87,063 |
-22,136 |
$500,000 under $1,000,000 |
674,354 |
99.9% |
189,198 |
83.3% |
24.6 |
137.0 |
241,095 |
-51,896 |
$1,000,000 or more |
2,815,960 |
100.0% |
818,143 |
100.0% |
102.8 |
621.6 |
1,093,954 |
-275,811 |
You can see that there’s a nice chunk of change coming into the households
earning less than $30,000, and significant net tax benefits accrue up to the
$75,000-$100,000 income level. (I’m not too crazy about the "dip" in tax
benefits for the $30-40,000 category -- must be a demographic quirk in the
system.) Over $100,000, the tax penalties become more apparent. Let’s look at
how "progressive" my scheme is, relative to the IRS’s, in the following table:
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) Category |
Avg Gross Income |
Avg Tax Paid (2002 IRS rules) |
Effective Tax % of AGI |
Avg Tax Paid (My Scheme) |
Effective Tax % of AGI |
All returns (130,076,443
total) |
46385 |
6,380 |
13.8% |
6,422 |
13.8% |
No adjusted gross income |
--- |
0 |
0.0% |
0 |
0.0% |
$1 under $10,000 |
5145 |
41 |
0.8% |
0 |
0.0% |
$10,000 under $20,000
|
14872 |
465 |
3.1% |
0 |
0.0% |
$20,000 under $25,000 |
22386 |
1,156 |
5.2% |
0 |
0.0% |
$25,000 under $30,000 |
27401 |
1,759 |
6.4% |
0 |
0.0% |
$30,000 under $40,000 |
34742 |
2,670 |
7.7% |
2,232 |
6.4% |
$40,000 under $50,000 |
44815 |
4,039 |
9.0% |
2,879 |
6.4% |
$50,000 under $75,000 |
61311 |
6,344 |
10.3% |
3,938 |
6.4% |
$75,000 under $100,000 |
85911 |
10,673 |
12.4% |
6,757 |
7.9% |
$100,000 under $200,000 |
131751 |
20,946 |
15.9% |
25,012 |
19.0% |
$200,000 under $500,000 |
287569 |
64,928 |
22.6% |
87,063 |
30.3% |
$500,000 under $1,000,000 |
674354 |
189,198 |
28.1% |
241,095 |
35.8% |
$1,000,000 or more |
2815960 |
818,143 |
29.1% |
1,093,954 |
38.8% |
So, yes, it’s clear that this scheme is somewhat more progressive than the
one we see in the 2002 IRS tax code. But remember, as recently as 1980, the
top marginal tax rate (paid by those earning over about $500,000 in 2003
dollars) was 70%! Of course, I’m sure not many rich people – then or now --
paid their lawful share, since they’ve always been able find loopholes in our
bewildering, cobbled-together tax code. (And if the loopholes aren’t there,
they could always make a few calls and get ‘em put there!) Let’s do a
fr’instance on a really supercalifragilisticexpialidocious rich guy who nets $100
million bucks in a good year. Using my scheme, his unadjusted multiplier is
3703X the base median income figure of $27,000, and his adjusted multiplier is
3 + (3700 X 6.2) = 22943. His total tax then becomes 22943 X $1760 = $40.4
million, or 40.4% of his income. Still a hell of a lot less than our old
historical 70% top marginal tax rate, I’d say.
I have the tax data for the 170,000 people in the top 0.1% of the taxpaying
population, but I don’t have the data for the super-rich class, say, the
17,000 households occupying the top 0.01%. It may well be that my scheme
actually lowers their taxes, compared to what they’ve been paying. If
that’s so, then my formula ends up transferring the tax burden from the
super-rich to the merely very rich. Not a perfect situation, but
I’ll take it. At any rate, my point is that the progressive effect of my
proposed scheme is constrained, and doesn’t take off geometrically past any
certain large value. So Bill Gates has nothing much to worry about. There’s
still plenty of room left for really rich people to make lots and lots more
money.
The progressivity in my scheme, on a large scale, has roughly the same
"shape" as the traditional IRS scheme. In my scheme, if the income brackets
were to be plotted evenly-spaced on the X-axis, you’d see one line at a
shallow slope up to 3X income, then another straight line at a steeper slope
beyond that, extending up to the moon. I think the IRS scheme would show
several line segments at different slopes, on up to the top segments. However,
thanks to the diddling of the last few political regimes, those top segments
would certainly be a tad shallower than mine.
You can play around all you want with the "base income", "base tax unit",
income multiplier breakpoints, and boost factor in my scheme. But remember,
you have to end up taking in at least as much tax revenues as under the old
IRS tax schemes. (Far be it from me to try to "starve" our government.) And
try not to confiscate too much from the poor and middle class, if you please.
Here are some other essential 2002 IRS data, omitted from the above charts,
that will let you do your own "social tax engineering":
Adj Gross Income Category |
No. Returns |
Total Adj Gross Income |
Total Taxes Paid |
All returns |
130076443 |
6,033,585,532,000 |
829,830,846,000 |
No adjusted gross income |
1752457 |
-80,192,750,000 |
|
$1 under $10,000 |
24281620 |
124,940,851,000 |
1,003,954,000 |
$10,000 under $20,000
|
23432328 |
348,494,488,000 |
10,888,418,000 |
$20,000 under $25,000 |
10023419 |
224,386,407,000 |
11,582,249,000 |
$25,000 under $30,000 |
8574575 |
234,951,863,000 |
15,079,322,000 |
$30,000 under $40,000 |
13980103 |
485,696,238,000 |
37,324,746,000 |
$40,000 under $50,000 |
10550456 |
472,821,958,000 |
42,612,342,000 |
$50,000 under $75,000 |
17396916 |
1,066,616,794,000 |
110,360,137,000 |
$75,000 under $100,000 |
9247839 |
794,489,072,000 |
98,700,327,000 |
$100,000 under $200,000 |
8422603 |
1,109,689,065,000 |
176,419,717,000 |
$200,000 under $500,000 |
1908466 |
548,814,753,000 |
123,912,146,000 |
$500,000 under $1,000,000 |
336684 |
227,044,247,000 |
63,700,073,000 |
$1,000,000 or more |
168977 |
475,832,545,000 |
138,247,414,000 |
Back to Essays...
NOTES:
IRS data from
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2893/is_2_24/ai_n9508746/pg_5
and
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2893/is_3_24/ai_n13660873.
In the interests of full disclosure, I think I might just about break even
if my scheme were implemented. But hey, I’m the one who gets to make the rules
on this page!
Maybe we’ll have to apply a little "buffering" at the point where people
just barely penetrate that $27,000 median income tax threshold. If they earned
$26,999 they’d pay $0 taxes, but next year at $27,001, they’d suddenly pay
$1760 taxes -- and end up behind where they were the previous year. Doesn’t
seem quite fair, does it? (Cripes, it’s easy to see how our damned tax code
ended up being so complicated!)
As I said above, I’d do away with exemptions and deductions based on the
number of kids a family chooses to have. As far as I’m concerned, there’re
already too many people on the planet. So why encourage more through tax
policy? Having kids is always a choice, and I lack any proper sympathy for
those who suffer economically as an outcome of that choice. But by the same
token, I wouldn’t reduce government programs to help feed and clothe and
better educate the poorest kids – unlike somebody I could mention!
As for tax deferrals on retirement savings accounts, I’m sort of
ambivalent. I reckon I would lean towards saying "lose ‘em", and just make
sure the Social Security fund is kept strong and viable. (In fact, I’d do away
with the notion of Social Security existing as a separate concept altogether –
it’s a very regressive tax indeed – and just support it as a "protected
government account" with regular income taxes.) From data I’ve seen, there’s a
fairly large percentage of average workers out there who don’t participate in
401K plans, even if they have the opportunity to do so. So it may well be that
the 401K/Roth, etc. tax deferral benefits are actually enjoyed more by the
better-off anyway.
As for the depressing effect my scheme might have on charity giving: If it
works the way it’s intended to, there wouldn’t be as much need for
charity! And just how many street people do you know who give daily
paeans of praise to the wonders of "trickle-down economics"?
In fact, it’s my perception that the main reason for the complexity of the
tax code is the tendency for our legislators to use it as the means of
influencing social change – for the good and for the ill. It does have a
certain seductive allure. They might think of it as social engineering, but to
me, it’s more like crapped-up diddling and bailing-wire jury-rigging. I’m an
engineer by profession, and I can tell you that I’d be fired on the spot if I
did my engineering the way they do their engineering. Here’s a
new concept to try: You want to encourage a social change? Do it by fiddling
with the federal budget, with applicable legislative acts pertaining thereto.
Leave the tax rules alone for a change.
At some point a few years down the road, I think it might be necessary to
make an adjustment to the base income and base tax constants used in my tax
scheme. If the scheme did succeed in raising the median income in any
significant way, then we might ultimately have to revisit the basis. However
this happens, we’d have to do it in a way that maintains the link between the
median taxpayer’s income line and everybody else’s. That’s the whole argument
and philosophy of this tax scheme.
It would be illuminating to know just how everybody felt about where the
threshold of a "good life" was. Maybe there’s a poll out there that gives that
information. I bet you’d find a pretty big disparity in the answers, depending
on the individual’s "starting point". The "good life" income for a person at
the median income level would likely be less than my income, and for a rich
person, it would likely be a lot more. In a true democracy, you’d let everyone
register their opinion, and take the average to establish the final "tax
rule". That is, if anyone actually trusted democracy…
I’ve got a college degree, and I’m a reasonably intelligent person. Last year I
came darned close to not being smart enough to do my own taxes. Frankly, I
sometimes wonder if the notion of the average person doing their own taxes
borders on the ludicrous. Does this ring a bell with anyone?
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