Miami Herald

Tax code mostly benefits the wealthiest Americans

- BY PATRICIA COHEN

“Get your billions back, America,” the tax preparer H&R Block urges in television advertisem­ents.

What many taxpayers may not realize is that they already do. When it comes to the government, taxing is often just another name for spending.

There are tax credits and tax deductions; tax exclusions and tax exemptions; tax deferrals and tax reductions; tax discharges and tax preference­s, all of which put money in people’s wallets rather than take it out.

There is one critical difference between tax-related payouts, however, and those that come directly from the federal budget: Spending channeled through the tax code tends to overwhelmi­ngly benefit the wealthiest Americans.

According to an analysis of $340 billion in tax subsidies for housing, education, retirement and savings in 2013, the top 1 percent received about $95 billion, more than the $90 billion received by the bottom 80 percent combined, said the Corporatio­n for Enterprise Developmen­t, a nonprofit organizati­on that seeks to build assets for low- and moderate-income families.

“Every year, the federal government spends billions of dollars on these tax programs primarily to support the highestinc­ome households that need support the least,” said Ezra Levin, associate director of government affairs for the group, which is based in Washington.

Relentless pressure in recent years, particular­ly by

 ?? DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? • TURN TO SUBSIDIES, 2B U.S. Internal Revenue Service 1040 Individual Income Tax forms are arranged in Tiskilwa, Ill.
DANIEL ACKER/BLOOMBERG NEWS • TURN TO SUBSIDIES, 2B U.S. Internal Revenue Service 1040 Individual Income Tax forms are arranged in Tiskilwa, Ill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States