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Gale and Marron:
Five Myths About the 47 Percent:
1. Forty-seven percent of Americans don’t pay taxes:
The most pernicious misconception about people who don’t pay federal
income taxes is that they don’t pay any taxes…. Almost two-thirds of the
47 percent work… their payroll taxes help finance Social Security and
Medicare…. [A] family of three with an income of $30,000 would owe no
federal income tax… [but] could easily pay more than $4,500, or 15
percent of their income, in taxes.
2. Members of the 47 percent will never pay federal income taxes:
Politicians and commentators often talk about those who don’t pay
income taxes as though they’re in a special club with lifetime
membership…. [Y]oung people… the temporarily unemployed, working
parents… entrepreneurs whose businesses experience a loss… look forward
to the day, perhaps in just a year or two, when their incomes will rise
and they will… pay federal income taxes. The reverse is true for many
senior citizens….
3. Many high-income people game the system to pay no income tax:
Our jerry-rigged tax code leaves many Americans with a nagging sense
that other people are exploiting loopholes to avoid taxes…. Sadly,
there’s an element of truth to that. But gimmickry by high-income
taxpayers has essentially nothing to do with who does and doesn’t pay
income taxes…. The vast majority of people who pay no federal income tax
have low earnings, are elderly or have children at home…. About half of
these households don’t pay federal income tax simply because their
incomes are low. More than one-fifth are retirees… another one-seventh
are [poor] working families with children…. Together, these three groups
of taxpayers account for almost 90 percent of the households that pay
no federal income tax.
4. The 47 percent vote Democratic: In the leaked
video… Romney counts the 47 percent as people who will vote for
President Obama “no matter what.”… [F]ewer than half of individuals in
households with incomes below $30,000 voted in 2008…. Romney appears to
hold a lead over Obama among elderly voters [who don't pay income
taxes], a group that votes enthusiastically.
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5. Tax increases are the only way to bring more of these households onto the tax rolls:
Romney’s comments about the 47 percent raise the question: If too many
Americans pay no federal income tax, how should we reduce that number?…
The expansion of the child credit under President George W. Bush in
2001, for example, removed many households from the rolls…. But there is
another way. The share of households paying no income tax is near
record highs not only because of tax policy but also because of the
struggling economy. Higher earnings, particularly for low- and
moderate-income workers, would move more Americans into the
income-tax-paying category…
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