Albuquerque Journal

Tax bills for the wealthy approach 30-year high

Mid, low incomes pay reduced rate

- By Stephen Ohlemacher The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The poor rich. With Washington gridlocked again over whether to raise their taxes, it turns out wealthy families already are paying some of their biggest federal tax bills in decades even as the rest of the population continues to pay at historical­ly low rates.

President Barack Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress say the wealthy must pay their fair share if the federal government is ever going to fix its finances and reduce the budget deficit to a manageable level.

A new analysis, however, shows that average tax bills for high-income families rarely have been higher since the Congressio­nal Budget Office began tracking the data in 1979. Middle- and low-income families aren’t paying as much as they used to.

For 2013, families with incomes in the top 20 percent of the nation will pay an average of 27.2 percent of their income in federal taxes, according to projection­s by the Tax Policy Center, a research organizati­on based in Washington. The top 1 percent of households, those with incomes averaging $1.4 million, will pay an average of 35.5 percent.

Those tax rates, which include income, payroll, corporate and estate taxes, are among the highest since 1979.

The average family in the bottom 20 percent of households won’t pay any federal taxes. Instead, many families in this group will get payments from the federal government by claiming more in credits than they owe in taxes, including payroll taxes. That will give them a negative tax rate.

“My sense is that highincome people feel abused by being targeted always for more taxes,” Roberton Williams, a fellow at the Tax Policy Center, said. “You can understand why they feel that way.”

Last week, Senate Democrats were unable to advance their proposal to raise taxes on some wealthy families for the second time this year as part of a package to avoid automatic spending cuts. The bill failed Thursday when Republican­s blocked it. A competing Republican bill that included no tax increases also failed, and the automatic spending cuts began taking effect Friday.

The issue, however, isn’t going away.

Obama and Democratic leaders in Congress insist that any future deal to reduce government borrowing must include a mix of spending cuts and more tax revenue.

“I am prepared to do hard things and to push my Democratic friends to do hard things,” Obama said Friday. “But what I can’t do is ask middle-class families, ask seniors, ask students to bear the entire burden of deficit reduction when we know we’ve got a bunch of tax loopholes that are benefiting the well-off and the well-connected, aren’t contributi­ng to growth, aren’t contributi­ng to our economy. It’s not fair. It’s not right.”

On Sunday, Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky said Republican­s are committed to reducing the budget deficit without raising taxes again. In a separate broadcast interview, White House economic adviser Gene Sperling called that position unreasonab­le.

The Democrats’ sequester bill included the “Buffett Rule,” named after billionair­e investor Warren Buffett. It would gradually phase in a requiremen­t that people making more than $1 million a year pay at least 30 percent of their income in federal taxes.

The rule targets millionair­es who make most of their money from investment­s — capital gains and qualified dividends, which have a top tax rate of 20 percent.

On average, households making more than $1 million this year will pay 37.2 percent of their income in federal taxes, according to the Tax Policy Center. But there are exceptions.

For example, the Internal Revenue Service tracks tax returns for the 400 highest-filers each year. Those taxpayers made an average of $202 million in 2009, the latest year available. Their average federal income tax rate: 19.9 percent. That’s still higher than the tax rate paid by most middle - income fami - l ies, but not by much. The middle 20 percent of U.S. households — those making an average of $46,600 — will pay an average of 13.8 percent of their income in federal taxes for this year, according to the Tax Policy Center. Over the past three decades, the average federal tax rate for this group has been about 16 percent.

The Associated Press analyzed two sets of data to compare tax burdens over time.

The CBO produces data from 1979 to 2009; the center has overlappin­g data from 2004 through 2013. Both get tax data from the IRS, but they use slightly different methodolog­ies to calculate federal tax burdens.

Still, their numbers track closely enough to make some general observatio­ns. For example, it is clear that for 2013, average tax bills for the wealthy will be among the highest since 1979. It also is clear that federal taxes for middle- and low-income households will stay well below their averages for the same period.

Liberals and many Democrats say rich families can afford to pay higher taxes because their incomes have grown much more than incomes for middle- and lowincome families.

Conservati­ves say raising taxes again on the wealthy would reduce their incentive to save and invest, hurting long-term economic growth.

“Raising taxes hurts the economy, and raising taxes on upper-income individual­s — whether those who work for salaries or those who save and earn capital income — always hurts the economy the most,” said J.D. Foster, a fellow at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation. “Spite and envy are not sound bases for public policy.”

 ??  ?? McCONNELL: GOP committed to not raising taxes
McCONNELL: GOP committed to not raising taxes
 ??  ?? BARACK: Wants rich to face bigger tax burden
BARACK: Wants rich to face bigger tax burden

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