Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Don't Bite the Hand that Feeds You: The Truth about Taxes

by Madeleine Kando

We have all heard the expression ‘In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes’, but even though they are both certain, we don’t spend weeks on end agonizing over death every time April comes around. It is taxes that gives us heart palpitations, high blood pressure and other physical ailments. Death actually has the advantage over taxes of being non-negotiable. We cannot fudge the books or take any deductions on death. You cannot hide in an off-shore account, death will find you, trust me.

But what death mostly has going for it is that it’s a lot less complicated than taxes. I found that out the moment I started doing research for this article. So, rather than pretend that I know what I am talking about, I will admit up front that this essay resembles a piece of Swiss cheese with more holes than cheese.

Let me start with the 47%. Was Romney right about the 47%? Yes. There is a large proportion of Americans that do not owe money to the government because they either don’t earn enough, they have too many expenses or because they have a lot of deductions.

Was Romney wrong about the 47%? Yes. The 47% pays payroll tax, state, local and sales tax, gas and property tax. Not only do they pay all these taxes they pay a larger share of their income towards these taxes than the rich. It’s called a ‘regressive tax’.

Progressive or Regressive?
If 47% of Americans don’t pay income tax, then where does the income tax come from? You guessed it, it comes from the 53% that makes more than the 47%.  In other words, America has a much narrower income tax base than most other Western countries. In Holland, for example, tax liability extends across the board. They tax the poor more. It may sound counter-intuitive, but America’s tax system is more progressive than the Dutch one. It gets even worse if you take into account that European welfare states rely on consumption tax more than on income tax to fill their coffers. A poor person pays the same amount of tax as a rich person when they consume bread. It just takes a much bigger bite out of their income. Consumption tax is regressive.

Taxing the Poor to Pay the Poor
One has to look at what the taxes are spent on to determine if the whole system ends up being ‘progressive’. In Holland, almost all of the taxes go toward Social Security and Health Care, two items that benefit everyone. The Robin Hood of Social Welfare might take from the poor as well as from the rich, but he gives it all back to the poor in the form of child subsidy, health care, education and retirement.

Taxing the Middle Class to Pay for the Middle Class
Not only is the top tax rate in Holland a whopping 52% (compared to the 35% in the US), but it starts to kick in when someone is making a measly $72,000. Compare that to the American Fat Cats that can get away with making $388,349 before they qualify for the 35% bracket.

Dutch income tax brackets
Tax income
Tax bracket
$ 0 - $ $24,066
1.95 %
$ 24,066- $43,016
10.80 %
$43,016- $71,755
42 %
$71,755
52 %

Tax income
Tax bracket
$0 – $17,400
10% Bracket
$17,400 – $70,700
15% Bracket
$70,700 – $142,700
25% Bracket
$142,700 – $217,450
28% Bracket
$217,450 – $388,350
33% Bracket
Over $388,350
35% Bracket

Even though America’s tax collection system is more progressive at the lower end, it certainly isn’t at the high end of the income ladder. For some obscure reason, the top 0.1% only pays 18% income tax. Someone should explain that to me. It certainly would fill one of the gaping holes in my Swiss cheese. Since the top tax rate doesn’t kick in until much higher on the income scale, a much smaller portion of Americans pay the bulk of income taxes. Doesn’t that make the Government overly dependent on this group? No one wants to bite the hand that feeds it.

The Robin Hood Effect
The surprising conclusion is that the taxation system of a country like Holland is more ‘regressive’ in its collection, but more ‘progressive in its reallocation. It is more ‘47% friendly’. It gives the government more revenue without taking away from people’s ability to be productive. So should we expand our tax base, rely more on consumption tax and redistribute more progressively? I doubt any politician would want to go there, but it’s worth looking into…

Income Inequality
Income inequality is the highest in the US of all Western nations. There is an instinctive revulsion in the Social Democracies of Europe to let income inequality get too large. So, in essence, even though taxation on income might not be as progressive, income itself is not that unequal to begin with. In Holland, the poorest 5% of the population is twice as affluent as in the US. On the Genie index (a measure of income equality worldwide), Holland is at the very top, the US at the very bottom. **

The Sheriff of Nottingham Effect
Did America make the mistake of asking too much of the few? European social democracies use efficient consumption taxes to pay for their programs and they ask a lot more from the average earner. On top of it, if you get taxed on your savings and on capital income, you start resenting paying taxes all together and you don’t see the benefits of redistributing money. The trick is to find the right formula: Once people see the benefits of redistribution, what’s there not to like? leave comment here

** A major source for this piece of Swiss cheese can be found in an article in The Economist: ‘Democracy in America’

4 comments:

Tom Kando said...

Madeleine’s article is awesome. She did great homework, she provides good precise numbers, and she draws the right conclusions (Plus, I find it a bit difficult to insert tables into my posts, so that’s another plus).

Just one question: It’s always struck me that America has one more layer of taxation than do most countries in Europe and elsewhere: the State income tax.

I realize that Madeleine does mention that tax, along with the sales tax, the property tax and other taxes. I also realize that it is difficult to compare the overall level of American and European taxation, and even to compare states within the US. Some states (e.g. Texas) don’t have an income tax.

All I am saying is this: Both conservatives and progressives have always agreed that OVERALL, American taxes are traditionally lower than European taxes. More Capitalism here, more Socialism there, etc. Madeleine’s tables confirm this.

But if you include the STATE income tax (which Holland and the rest of Europe don’t have), then America may not look quite as low-taxed compared to Europe, right?

I still feel that the US federal budget is too small of a percentage of our GDP. The federal government takes in about 16% of the total economy and it spends about 22% of it (hence the deficit). The budget of Many European governments approaches half of a country’s GDP. So there is plenty of room for the US federal budget to grow. But I just wanted to remind people of that extra layer of taxation which exists only in the US - the States.

Madeleine said...

Tom: Thanks for pointing to one of the gaping holes in my Swiss cheese.

Here in Massachusetts, we pay a marginal income tax rate of 5.3%. New Hampshire has no state income tax. I am not sure how all the income tax rates average out for the whole country.

drtaxsacto said...

I am not sure where to begin, as someone who did a doctorate on tax theory. Holland's GDP is about the size of Florida (or a bit more than a third the size of California). So administering a tax system or even an economy of that size is a lot more simple than doing the same in the US. We have consumption taxes (they are called sales tax - California currently has the highest in the nation) but for income tax (not including social insurance taxes) the top pays considerably more than the bottom half. The benefit of that is that it increases the volatility - the defect is that it increases the instability in the system. (High earners get considerably smaller segments of income from salary) It also has a negative effect on economic growth.

Next it is inappropriate to conflate taxes and expenditures. The problem with the distribution of benefits is that there is an efficiency loss in trying to redistribute income.

Finally,The tax system has a long effect on economic growth. Holland's(growth rate), for example was 1.3%. (About 7/10 of a point under the paltry US rate.) That means that the Dutch economy doubles every 55 years. For all the expenditures in the public sector (and with a considerably more homogeneous population) the life expectancy of the Dutch is about 2 years longer than the US. All that energy going into the public sector produces tiny economy growth and not a significant difference in life expectancy. From my perspective that is not a very good tradeoff.

Tom Kando said...

Reaction to Jonathan’s comment:

1. You mention that “high earners get considerably smaller segments of income from salary.” This reminds me of the obscenity that income from labor is taxed much more heavily than income from paper shuffling.

2. As Nobel laureate Paul Krugman points out again in his article “Raising Medicare, Social Security Age is Cruel and Unneeded” (New York Times and Sacramento Bee, Nov. 17), “the most prominent zombie idea today is that low taxes on rich people are the key to prosperity.” This idea “has been repeatedly refuted, bu it refuses to die.”

3. Dutch vs. US growth rates: Currently, yes, European economies, including Holland, are again in recession (negative growth), whereas the US economy is still growing at about 2%. But in the long run, it isn’t clear which economy does better. It depends on your baseline. For example, if you go back to 1945, European economic growth has been nothing short of miraculous. Granted, this is an unfair and arbitrary baseline, plus: much of the recovery was jump-started by US generosity (the Marshall Plan).

My point is simply that it isn’t clear which economic approach yields the best long-term results - America’s more capitalistic approach, or Holland’s more “welfare state” approach.

4. Yes, life expectancy is longer in the Netherlands (at a much lower medical cost), but this isn’t the only quality of life indicator on which the Netherlands outscore the US. Look also at crime, inequality, the poverty rate, infant mortality, the quality of education, leisure and recreation, public transportation and other services, stress, psychological well-being (happiness), etc.

5. With a large influx of immigrants, Holland is no longer nearly as homogeneous as its stereotype, an neither is size necessarily a relevant factor, as Germany, with the 4th largest economy in the world, is also doing extremely well.

American conservatives really need to go and see things for themselves, and not just quote statistics. Spending a few weeks in a place like Holland or Germany would be an eye opener.

Look: I am not saying that everything is hunky-dory in the Netherlands, and that life sucks in the United States. I do not regret moving to America, where I enjoy the freedoms and the relatively high quality of life still available to a majority of Americans. However, American conservatives have GOT to understand that many other countries enjoy an equally high and in some cases a superior quality of life, and that this is due to their more progressive economic and social policies.

Go and check out the evidence. Don’t burry your head in the sand, don’t be an ostrich.

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