Democratic Leadership Narrowing Down List Of Super Committee Members
Monday, August 8, 2011
The Top 3 Lies About Taxes:
Lie Number 1) Poor people don't pay taxes.
Example: From The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
At a hearing last month, SenatorChaThe Center on Budget and Policy PrioritiesrlesGrassl ey said, "According to the JointCommi tteeOnTaxa tion, 49 percent of households are paying 100 percent of taxes coming in to the federal government ." At the same hearing, CatoInstit uteSeniorF ellow AlanReynol ds asserted, "Poor people don't pay taxes in this country." Last April, referring to a TaxPolicyC enter estimate of households with no federal income tax liability in 2009, FoxBusines s host StuartVarn ey said on Fox and Friends, "Yes, 47 percent of households pay not a single dime in taxes."
In 2009, Congress' Joint Committee on Taxation found that 51 percent of households owed no federal income tax. According to Marr and Highsmith, that figure was inflated by special recession-
But that does not mean that these households pay no federal taxes at all. Far from it: Nearly all working Americans pay payroll taxes to fund Medicare and Social Security. In 2007, the poorest Americans -- taxpayers in the bottom fifth of income -- paid 8.8 percent of their income as payroll taxes. The next fifth paid almost ten percent. The top 20 percent of earners paid only 5.7 percent. And while the government has that money, they use it and make money off of it.
And of course, these numbers don't include state and local taxes or excise fees like gas taxes, which tend to have a regressive impact that hits poorer Americans harder. Bottom line: only 14 percent of Americans don't pay either federal income taxes or payroll taxes -- and that group is made up primarily of "low-incom
The rich have gotten rich off of the sweat and labor of others and then have taken those profits to buy politician
About Deficit
Read the Article at HuffingtonPost
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