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View Full Version : Obama's 95% Illusion: It depends on what the meaning of 'tax cut' is.


Garcia Bronco
10-13-2008, 08:49 AM
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122385651698727257.html

One of Barack Obama's most potent campaign claims is that he'll cut taxes for no less than 95% of "working families." He's even promising to cut taxes enough that the government's tax share of GDP will be no more than 18.2% -- which is lower than it is today.


It's a clever pitch, because it lets him pose as a middle-class tax cutter while disguising that he's also proposing one of the largest tax increases ever on the other 5%. But how does he conjure this miracle, especially since more than a third of all Americans already pay no income taxes at all? There are several sleights of hand, but the most creative is to redefine the meaning of "tax cut."

For the Obama Democrats, a tax cut is no longer letting you keep more of what you earn. In their lexicon, a tax cut includes tens of billions of dollars in government handouts that are disguised by the phrase "tax credit." Mr. Obama is proposing to create or expand no fewer than seven such credits for individuals:


- A $500 tax credit ($1,000 a couple) to "make work pay" that phases out at income of $75,000 for individuals and $150,000 per couple.

- A $4,000 tax credit for college tuition.

- A 10% mortgage interest tax credit (on top of the existing mortgage interest deduction and other housing subsidies).

- A "savings" tax credit of 50% up to $1,000.

- An expansion of the earned-income tax credit that would allow single workers to receive as much as $555 a year, up from $175 now, and give these workers up to $1,110 if they are paying child support.

- A child care credit of 50% up to $6,000 of expenses a year.

- A "clean car" tax credit of up to $7,000 on the purchase of certain vehicles.

Here's the political catch. All but the clean car credit would be "refundable," which is Washington-speak for the fact that you can receive these checks even if you have no income-tax liability. In other words, they are an income transfer -- a federal check -- from taxpayers to nontaxpayers. Once upon a time we called this "welfare," or in George McGovern's 1972 campaign a "Demogrant." Mr. Obama's genius is to call it a tax cut.

The Tax Foundation estimates that under the Obama plan 63 million Americans, or 44% of all tax filers, would have no income tax liability and most of those would get a check from the IRS each year. The Heritage Foundation's Center for Data Analysis estimates that by 2011, under the Obama plan, an additional 10 million filers would pay zero taxes while cashing checks from the IRS.

The total annual expenditures on refundable "tax credits" would rise over the next 10 years by $647 billion to $1.054 trillion, according to the Tax Policy Center. This means that the tax-credit welfare state would soon cost four times actual cash welfare. By redefining such income payments as "tax credits," the Obama campaign also redefines them away as a tax share of GDP. Presto, the federal tax burden looks much smaller than it really is.

The political left defends "refundability" on grounds that these payments help to offset the payroll tax. And that was at least plausible when the only major refundable credit was the earned-income tax credit. Taken together, however, these tax credit payments would exceed payroll levies for most low-income workers.

It is also true that John McCain proposes a refundable tax credit -- his $5,000 to help individuals buy health insurance. We've written before that we prefer a tax deduction for individual health care, rather than a credit. But the big difference with Mr. Obama is that Mr. McCain's proposal replaces the tax subsidy for employer-sponsored health insurance that individuals don't now receive if they buy on their own. It merely changes the nature of the tax subsidy; it doesn't create a new one.

There's another catch: Because Mr. Obama's tax credits are phased out as incomes rise, they impose a huge "marginal" tax rate increase on low-income workers. The marginal tax rate refers to the rate on the next dollar of income earned. As the nearby chart illustrates, the marginal rate for millions of low- and middle-income workers would spike as they earn more income.

Some families with an income of $40,000 could lose up to 40 cents in vanishing credits for every additional dollar earned from working overtime or taking a new job. As public policy, this is contradictory. The tax credits are sold in the name of "making work pay," but in practice they can be a disincentive to working harder, especially if you're a lower-income couple getting raises of $1,000 or $2,000 a year. One mystery -- among many -- of the McCain campaign is why it has allowed Mr. Obama's 95% illusion to go unanswered.

Please add your comments to the Opinion Journal forum.

Paladin
10-13-2008, 08:54 AM
Increase on the "other 5%" is a repeal of the previous 5% cut franted by the Big BSer Bush. Opinions are like ... well, you know, don't you?

Garcia Bronco
10-13-2008, 09:25 AM
Increase on the "other 5%" is a repeal of the previous 5% cut franted by the Big BSer Bush. Opinions are like ... well, you know, don't you?

You didn't actually read the whole thing did you?

frerottenextelway
10-13-2008, 09:49 AM
It's a ridiculous piece insinuating that anything other than a flat tax encourages people to not work or work less.

It's hore****. Just use some common sense on the child care credit. Loads of people pay in the neighborhood of $10,000 a year per child on child care. If you have 2 children and a job that pays $20,000 a year, your pay is essentially nothing - which encourages people to not work. If you ease that cost, then it makes working profitable again.

Garcia Bronco
10-13-2008, 09:52 AM
It's a ridiculous piece insinuating that anything other than a flat tax encourages people to not work or work less.

It's hore****. Just use some common sense on the child care credit. Loads of people pay in the neighborhood of $10,000 a year per child on child care. If you have 2 children and a job that pays $20,000 a year, your pay is essentially nothing - which encourages people to not work. If you ease that cost, then it makes working profitable again.

Or...we could let people worry about their own child care. Provide no credit from a tax perspective and then it shifts responsibilty where it belongs: On the people that have kids they cannot afford.

frerottenextelway
10-13-2008, 10:04 AM
Or...we could let people worry about their own child care. Provide no credit from a tax perspective and then it shifts responsibilty where it belongs: On the people that have kids they cannot afford.

a.) that's not what the article was about

b.) i know people that have gone from dual incomes to single income households over this (which is the point of the article - and the article is ass-backwards). they could still ''afford'' it, but it's the anti-economic growth way to go. just use common sense here - people choose to not work - people have less money - people buy less things.

Drek
10-13-2008, 10:14 AM
What a surprise, Murdock's toilet paper isn't a fan of Obama's tax plan and is trying to sell a bill of goods that no independent tax research group is buying.

Rohirrim
10-13-2008, 10:20 AM
Or...we could let people worry about their own child care. Provide no credit from a tax perspective and then it shifts responsibilty where it belongs: On the people that have kids they cannot afford.

Excellent idea. Our economy does not provide sufficient wages for a great part of the population to raise children and the solution is to stop having children. Yippee! Oops! There goes your consumer economy. That's okay. We'll do what the Italians did when their birth rate started dropping; Invite in people from other countries to do the low end jobs. Ooops! Now they are having babies and they want child care.

Garcia Bronco
10-13-2008, 10:33 AM
Excellent idea. Our economy does not provide sufficient wages for a great part of the population to raise children and the solution is to stop having children. Yippee! Oops! There goes your consumer economy. That's okay. We'll do what the Italians did when their birth rate started dropping; Invite in people from other countries to do the low end jobs. Ooops! Now they are having babies and they want child care.

I believe they call it "Planned Parenthood." Pay for your own kids and if you can't afford it, tough ****.

Mr.Meanie
10-13-2008, 10:38 AM
I believe they call it "Planned Parenthood." Pay for your own kids and if you can't afford it, tough ****.

so I'm guessing you support abortion rights. Correct?

Spider
10-13-2008, 10:58 AM
I believe they call it "Planned Parenthood." Pay for your own kids and if you can't afford it, tough ****.

huh never figured you for an abortion kind of guy .. funny how fast a person will ditch his values when it comes to a buck

Garcia Bronco
10-13-2008, 11:17 AM
so I'm guessing you support abortion rights. Correct?

I do not support the act of abortion. I also do not support the government being involved. I also do not support public funds to support someone elses children.

Bronco Bob
10-13-2008, 02:40 PM
Or...we could let people worry about their own child care. Provide no credit from a tax perspective and then it shifts responsibilty where it belongs: On the people that have kids they cannot afford.

If the right wing gets their way and outlaws contraceptives and abortions,
won't that mean even more people having children they can't afford?

Rigs11
10-13-2008, 02:51 PM
Or...we could let people worry about their own child care. Provide no credit from a tax perspective and then it shifts responsibilty where it belongs: On the people that have kids they cannot afford.

I got a better idea, let's shift the responsibility in iraq to the iraqi government with their 80 billion dollar surplus. And let's use the 10 billion we spend in iraq every month to give ourselves a tax cut, and provide ourselves with health insurance. Oh no wait..that's socialism right?Ha!

Taco John
10-13-2008, 03:25 PM
Or...we could let people worry about their own child care. Provide no credit from a tax perspective and then it shifts responsibilty where it belongs: On the people that have kids they cannot afford.

Screw that. The government already takes enough of my money. I'll take any of my money back that I can possibly get to help with the costs of day care. That stuff adds up.

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-13-2008, 03:30 PM
I got a better idea, let's shift the responsibility in iraq to the iraqi government with their 80 billion dollar surplus. And let's use the 10 billion we spend in iraq every month to give ourselves a tax cut, and provide ourselves with health insurance. Oh no wait..that's socialism right?Ha!

Unless the tax cut goes to Wall Street bankers and/or the CEOs of failed insurance companies. ;)

L.A. BRONCOS FAN
10-13-2008, 03:32 PM
What a surprise, Murdock's toilet paper isn't a fan of Obama's tax plan and is trying to sell a bill of goods that no independent tax research group is buying.

:giggle:

You would think Garcia would get tired of being repeatedly embarrassed for being consistently wrong.