Credit to CNN.com for the full story
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Most people think they pay too much to Uncle Sam, but for some people it simply is not true.
In 2009, roughly 47% of households, or 71 million, will not owe any federal income tax, according to estimates by the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center.
Some in that group will even get additional money from the government because they qualify for refundable tax breaks.
The ranks of those whose major federal tax burdens net out at zero -- or less -- is on the rise. The center's original 2009 estimate was 38%. That was before enactment in February of the $787 billion economic recovery package, which included a host of new or expanded tax breaks.
The issue doesn't get a lot of attention even as lawmakers debate how to pay for policy initiatives like health reform, whether to extend the Bush tax cuts and how to reduce the deficit.
The vast majority of households making up to $30,000 fall into the category, as do nearly half of all households making between $30,000 and $40,000.
As you move up the income scale the percentages drop.
Nearly 22% of those making between $50,000 and $75,000 end up with no federal income tax liability or negative liability as do 9% of households with incomes between $75,000 and $100,000.
Of course, income taxes don't tell the whole story. Workers are also subject to payroll taxes, which support Social Security and Medicare.
When considering federal income taxes in combination with payroll taxes, the percent of households with a net liability of zero or less is estimated to be 24% this year, according to the Tax Policy Center's estimates.
A key reason why there is a zero-liability group at all is because the U.S. tax system is progressive. Those who bring in more money pay more than those lower down the income scale to support government functions such as national defense and social safety nets like Medicaid for those in need. That progressivity can be dialed up or down.
"Some think it's too progressive. Some don't think it's progressive enough," said Roberton Williams, a senior fellow at the center.
President Obama falls into the latter camp. He has proposed increasing the income tax burden on families making more than $250,000 and individuals making more than $200,000, while offering new measures to reduce the tax bite for most Americans making less.
One of Obama's proposals is to extend the 2001 and 2003 Bush tax cuts for everyone except high-income tax filers, which was the group that derived the most benefit from those cuts.
As a result, under Obama's budget, he would keep the ranks of the non-payers higher than they would otherwise be.
The question of who pays and who doesn't is not a trivial matter. But Washington policymakers are not dealing with it in an explicit way.
And that's a problem, given the country's fiscal outlook.
If asked to vote up or down on whether they are comfortable with such a large group of voters contributing no federal income tax or payroll tax revenue, the majority may well decide it is appropriate given the means of the households involved. Or they may decide that it's not.
Either way, that decision should inform the debate about the many costly policies and deficit-reduction strategies that lawmakers will be grappling with for years to come.
"As the number [of nonpayers] becomes larger, we have to question whether we'll make good decisions about how to allocate resources," economist George Zodrow, a professor at Rice University. "Most people don't understand how skewed the tax distribution is."
Experts say that to pay for all the things on the country's growing tab, the money can't just come from a shrunken pool of taxpayers.
"Over the long run, you'll have to have a broader base," Zodrow said.
Friends...our tax system needs to be reformed.... I can only say one thing: Those who are supposed to pay taxes should pay their taxes. Ill now let the debate begin!!


Comments: 18
Retired people on Social Security have to pay income tax just like anyone else even though they already paid income tax on that money when they were working. People over 70 do not pay any income tax and people that exist on below living wage standards do not pay income tax, many retired people are existing on below poverty level wages while the wealthy are still getting huge tax breaks just because they are classed as wealthy.
I'm sure there are many here who are better versed in tax law than I am but the progressive tax structure has always puzzled me. I suppose, at some point, it was justified but since then I believe it has become a political tool. Our country is suffocating in debt and yet, as the article points out, the tax base is shrinking. In my opinion, it's nothing more than a political game, paid for with the national credit card, to curry votes. How many candidates have you heard promise not to raise taxes then have to admit it is inevitable once elected? Reminds me of Charlie Brown trying to kick the football, he never learns, either.
Well below the poverty line, sales taxes, fees from the city, county, and State, and property taxes, are more than making up for the progressive taxes not paid.
Regressive taxes are a gigantic percentage of poor peoples income. That's the taxes to be concerned about.
Median household fell to $50,303 last year, from $52,163 in 2007. In 1998, median income was $51,295. In the four decades that the Census Bureau has been tracking household income, there has never before been a full decade in which median income failed to rise. (The previous record was seven years, ending in 1985.) Other Census data suggest that it also never happened between the late 1940s and the late 1960s. So it doesn’t seem to have happened since at least the 1930s.
That being said......if the low income earners are exempt from taxes and the TOP earners are sheltered from taxes........just who is bearing the burden of the MOST taxes and why did we let it happen?
Persons in family Poverty guideline
1 $10,830
2 14,570
3 18,310
4 22,050
5 25,790
you are poor
and you don't pay taxes.
My entire working life I have paid federal and state taxes and I have NEVER gotten back ALL taxes paid in on my tax return.
Doesn't that mean that when I was at the poverty level I DID pay taxes?
By the way, my husband and I only gross about $20,000 a year right now, just above poverty and we DEFINITELY pay taxes.....it really sucks having to choose between paying your utilities or putting food on the table. :(
I put down 0 (zero)
which means that more is taken out during the year
at the end of the year I file
and get more back in the Income tax return
that's just how I do it
by the way,
I feel what you are saying
Things are tough all over
If it wasn't for the local Teaching hospital
"University of Florida
Shands Jacksonville
I would not be able to get my blood pressure medication
:(
that's just how I do it"
We do this also Fred. I've just never seen ALL of it come back. :( Oh well, life goes on....
I do the best I can with what I've got
:)
I just want to know what big government is going to do about government taxes for 2009 and the many years to come.