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Tropical_Man 68M
6573 posts
10/21/2008 2:18 pm
ready for some welfare?


Obama: Tax cuts or welfare?

There's been a fair amount of ink spilled on whether Sen. Obama's claim that he would give tax cuts to 95 percent of Americans is legit. The key point is whether a transfer made to an individual who does not currently pay income taxes can be counted as a "tax cut."

The core component of Sen. Obama's tax cut plan is called "Making Work Pay." I've discussed it elsewhere, but the key claim is that it provides a $500 refundable income tax credit for each worker, for a maximum of $1000 per couple. The Tax Policy Center estimates its 10-year cost at $710 billion, so it's obviously a big-ticket item in Obama's tax agenda.

So here's the question: how should we categorize these policies?

The Tax Foundation reports that 33 percent of filers currently pay no net income taxes, which means that 67 percent of filers do. Since 95 percent is larger than 67 percent, it's seemingly hard for Sen. Obama to argue that 95 of Americans will receive a tax cut when only 67 percent are paying taxes in the first place. The Wall Street Journal editorial page relies on this argument in calling Obama's claims an "illusion."

But note that the references above are to the percentage of Americans paying income taxes. Most or all of the tax filers who do not pay income taxes do pay payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare. Obama's plan is clearly designed to compensate workers for the employee share of the Social Security payroll tax, which is 6.2 percent of all wages under $102,000. Under Obama's plan, workers would receive a refundable tax credit equal to 6.2% of wages up to $8,000, with a maximum credit of $500 per worker and $1,000 per couple. In effect, workers earning $8,000 would receive a full rebate of their Social Security payroll taxes while those earning more would receive a partial rebate. Obama economic advisor Jason Furman says, "Senator Obama believes that the tens of millions of families working hard and paying payroll taxes do not think that tax cuts are a form of 'welfare' or 'redistribution' - they think it is only fair to reward work."

Having laid that out, a few points seem relevant:

•In a purely technical sense, Sen. Obama's plan is not giving tax cuts to people who don't pay taxes; it's giving refundable income tax credits to compensate low earners for their Social Security payroll taxes. So score one for Obama, I guess.

•However, Obama's proposal ignores what's really going on: cutting Social Security payroll taxes for low earners, who already receive more in benefits than they pay in taxes ‒ that is, their "net taxes" are negative ‒ and filling the gap in Social Security's funding using income tax revenues. That's the clearest explanation of what's going on and would be the simplest way to structure what Obama wants to accomplish. If Obama wants to cut payroll taxes, he should cut payroll taxes ‒ without obscuring the effects of his plan on both Social Security progressivity and solvency.

•The only problem is that, viewed transparently, almost no one would agree that it's particularly good policy ‒ certainly not a policy worth $710 billion over 10 years, given everything else on our plate. His plan would make Social Security much more progressive and move it toward a "welfare program." And if we didn't fill the gap with income tax revenues, Social Security's long-term deficit would be increased by almost 60 percent.


Andrew Biggs