Houston Chronicle

It’s time to drain our federal tax swamp

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The highest U.S. income tax rate is 39.6 percent. A single person pays that on taxable income over $450,050. A couple pays it on income over $466,950. Earn another $1,000, and the U.S. Treasury claims $396 of it.

Only 1 percent of households pay anything like that rate. So the other 99 percent of us don’t face such punishment, right?

Wrong. Our tax system is a despicable, stinking swamp. It is quite possible for a person who earns far less than $450,000 a year to experience an effective tax rate that is higher than 39.6 percent. Indeed, you can be a worker at the edge of having a living wage and pay taxes at a higher rate than someone in the top 1 percent.

Don’t believe me? Pay attention. I will demonstrat­e.

The issue here is what economists call the marginal tax rate. It’s not the average tax rate. It’s not the total tax bill. It’s what a worker will lose to taxes and required payments when she earns additional money. The cause of the problem is simple. While our politician­s argue passionate­ly about federal income tax rates, the reality is that we face a mash-up of several kinds of taxes or required payments on income. You can see how ridiculous our system is by considerin­g the tax burden on a worker who earns $15 an hour and has the good fortune to work 2,000 hours, bringing in $30,000 a year.

The first tax to be paid is the employment tax, 15.3 percent for an independen­t worker. (Some will say that the tax rate is half of that, 7.65 percent, because employers nominally pay half, but the reality is that it is called an employment tax for a reason — it is a tax on labor.)

The second tax is the federal income tax. A single worker gets $10,350 tax-free due to the $6,300 standard deduction and $4,050 personal exemption. The next $9,275 is taxed at 10 percent. The remaining $10,375 is taxed at 15 percent. That gives a tax bill of $2,484, an average rate of 8.2 percent. Additional income is taxed at 15 percent. Add the two taxes, and you’ve got a marginal rate of 30.3 percent.

But that’s not all. The same worker must also buy health insurance. Without a subsidy, it would cost $265 a month. That $30,000-a-year income level, however, gets a premium subsidy of $57 a month.

Now let’s see what happens when that worker earns another $100 a month. As before, the worker will pay 15.3 percent in employment taxes and a federal income tax of 15 percent on the additional income. But the worker’s health insurance subsidy drops to $41 a month, a loss of $16 a month. That, in effect, is an additional “tax” of 16 percent.

So the worker earns an additional $1,200 a year — but 46.3 percent is immediatel­y lost to basic government costs. Meanwhile, that top-end worker pays at 39.6 percent because the employment tax is far behind and the full health insurance rate was paid long ago. What the high-income worker experience­s is a 39.6 percent marginal tax rate. What the lower-income worker experience­s is a 46.3 percent marginal tax rate.

So let’s ask a question: What are the remaining candidates for president proposing to do about this absurdity?

You can compare candidate platforms on the Tax Foundation website. Visit and you will find that four of the candidates want to fuss around with current income tax rates.

Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders, predictabl­y, want to raise income tax rates on higher incomes. John Kasich and Donald Trump, equally predictabl­y, want to reduce income tax rates.

These candidates are not proposing real change. They are offering to drain, or fill, different areas of the stinking swamp.

Only one remaining candidate advocates fundamenta­l change. He proposes a radical and simple flat tax with a big deduction. More important, he wants to replace the employment tax with a value-added tax. The largest tax most workers pay would no longer be taken from paychecks.

That candidate is Ted Cruz. He’s talking about fundamenta­l change in an intolerabl­e system. Is anyone listening?

 ?? David Paul Morris / Bloomberg ?? Scott Burns raises the issue of the marginal tax rate, what a worker will lose to taxes and required payments when he or she earns additional money.
David Paul Morris / Bloomberg Scott Burns raises the issue of the marginal tax rate, what a worker will lose to taxes and required payments when he or she earns additional money.
 ?? SCOTT BURNS ??
SCOTT BURNS

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