Tax Burden Continues to Shift from the Wealthy to the Working Class

Angry Again

Banned
Published on Sunday, October 10, 2004 by CommonDreams.org

Tax Burden Continues to Shift from the Wealthy to the Working Class
by Ralph Nader LINKY

As corporations evolve due to new technology and globalization, they simultaneously evolve new loopholes and ways of manipulating the tax system. The Center for Public Integrity puts it this way: "Because of exploding technologies and their inability to regulate cyberspace, governments today find themselves impotent to tax trillions of dollars in potential new revenue from electronic commerce." A book titled The Sovereign Individual by James Dale Davidson calls cyberspace "the ultimate offshore jurisdiction. An economy with no taxes. Bermuda in the sky with diamonds."

Global corporations are reaching a stage where they can decide how, where, and even if they want to be taxed. During the past twenty-five years, the trend has been unmistakable. Both relatively and absolutely, corporations pay less income tax. Relative to the middle class and the poor, the super wealthy are paying on the whole a smaller percentage of their income in overall taxes. Nominal corporate tax rates, the effective rate actually paid, and the taxes on capital gains and dividends all have been dropping. The tax burden continues to shift from the wealthy to the working class. These trends exacerbate already sharp disparities in wealth and income in the United States - the worst disparities in the western world.

The slide into deeper plutocracy has continued under Republican and Democratic administrations, at both the federal and state levels. Apart from blocking the repeal of the estate tax under Clinton, the Democrats appear helpless. A clutch of them have essentially joined the Republicans, and the party as a whole cannot muster the unity or energy to stop the Republicrats from further plundering the American middle class. In the words of David Cay Johnston, the New York Times Pulitzer Prize winner and author of the excellent bestseller Perfectly Legal: The Covert Campaign to Rig Our Tax System to Benefit the Super Rich and Cheat Everybody Else: "There is an underground economy among the super rich that lets them understate their true income and overstate their tax deductions. . . . The major change taking place is a shifting of burdens off the super-rich and onto everyone below them. It is a shift that began with the Democrats in 1983 and that has been increased dramatically since the Republicans won control of the House in 1995."

Where have the Democrats been? If they couldn't play offense, what about defense? Well, for starters, they were dialing for the same corporate dollars. Second, many seemed to have lost their moorings regarding the public philosophy and rationale of progressive taxation, including taxation of unearned income. Third, some bought into the theory that cutting taxes on the wealthy and corporations automatically increased investment and economic growth. They forgot that taxes were much higher in the prosperous 1960s, and that tax-cuts can cause ballooning deficits that inflict their own pain on the economy. And, fourth, they've lost the semantic advantage in the debate over taxes. Johnston writes of the Republicans' chief semanticist, Frank Luntz, promoting the use of the phrase "death tax" instead of estate tax or inheritance tax. For a drive to eliminate the capital gains tax, he recommended use of the phrase "savings and investment tax." For the effort to privatize social security, he said "Social Security" should never be mentioned, and instead should be replaced by "retirement security." Luntz was so contemptuous of the Democrats that he even openly advised them on how to develop their own effective language, such as describing the estate tax as "billionaire's tax." The Democrats' response - grumble, mumble, and jumble their message.

In the midst of the tax fairness crisis, there is an easy initiative for the Democrats: press Congress to give the IRS an adequate budget, skilled staff, and the authority to go after the tax evasions and tax avoidance schemes of the global corporations and the super-affluent classes. They need go no further than the rationale given and documented by Johnston: "Our tax system is being used to create a nation with fewer stable jobs and less secure retirement income. The tax system is being used by the rich, through their allies in Congress, to shift risks off themselves and onto everyone else. And perhaps worst of all, our tax system now forces most Americans to subsidize the lifestyles of the very rich, who enjoy the benefits of our democracy without paying their fair share of its price."

The triumph of the oligarchs extends further still. Not only is the IRS inadequately funded to cope with the increasing assaults on its enforcement duties in areas offering the greatest revenue recovery, but its resources are getting squeezed even tighter. Under Clinton and a Republican Congress, the number of revenue agents decreased, as did the number of audits of the corporate wealthy. From 1989 to 1999, with 14 percent more returns being filed, Charles Lewis and Bill Allison, in their book The Cheating of America, report that "the number of permanent IRS employees dropped 26 percent (from 111,980 to 82,563). The President and Congress also cut the staff of the IRS Office of Examination, including revenue agents and tax auditors, by 34 percent, from 31,315 to 20,736. . . . Under political pressure, the IRS is auditing poor people more often then well-heeled taxpayers. And tax-related prosecutions are half what they were nearly twenty years ago."

Politicians should be asked whether they favor increased enforcement of the existing tax laws. Do they think the poor should be audited more often than the rich? Should billionaires be able to renounce their U.S. citizenship in order to avoid taxes, and still be able to return home for months on end because the law barring their reentry is rarely, if ever, enforced? Increasing enforcement resources, now being requested by the IRS, would certainly produce more revenue. But what happens instead? Audits of the biggest corporations, which pay 85 percent of the corporate income tax, declined: two out of three were investigated in the late 1980s, but that number has slipped to one out of three. The IRS itself is not allocating small resources for big gains.

Remind your members of Congress: it is time for integrated thought about taxes to clarify goals, collect revenues, and expend them efficiently. The taxpayers who have the greatest stake in progressive tax fairness, tax simplicity, and the spending of tax revenues are the far larger number of small taxpayers who have the votes.

Ralph Nader is the author of: The Good Fight : Declare Your Independence and Close the Democracy Gap (Harper Collins Books). http://www.ralphnadersgoodfight.com/
 
I pay in the 28% range, Kerry paid ~12.5%, I paid more then x2 kerry himself did. :confused:

what % did you pay that you didn't get back last year?
 
I am, I am comparing $ to his Senate pay (or does he not get paid on those day he doesn't show up for werk?) . . . does he have other income, maybe an allowance from heinz or alimony fomr his last.
 
Just because

Middle Class Said To Pay Higher Tax Rate Than Heinz Kerry And Kerry
Mon Oct 11 2004 10:22:17 ET

Stephen Moore, president of the Club for Growth, writes in the WALL STREET JOURNAL on Monday: "According to the Kerrys' own tax records, and they have not released all of them, the couple had a combined income of $6.8 million in income last year and paid $725,000 in income taxes. That means their effective tax rate was a whopping 12.8%.... "Under the current tax system the middle class pays far more than the Kerry tax rate. In fact, the average federal tax rate -- combined payroll and income tax -- for a middle-class family is closer to 20% or more. George W. and Laura Bush, who had an income one- tenth of the Kerrys', paid a tax rate of 30%. ...

"Here is the man who finds clever ways to reduce his own tax liability while voting for higher taxes on the middle class dozens of times in his Senate career. He even voted against the Bush tax cut that saves each middle-class family about $1,000." The Kerrys "have unwittingly made the case for what George W. Bush says he wants to do: radically simplify and flatten out the tax code. ... So before John Kerry is given the opportunity to raise taxes again on American workers, shouldn't he and Teresa at least pay their fair share?"

END
 
I wasn't including Tereeza's $ in my tracking :eek: just me and the wife combined against his free money for doing nothing.

Offshore Tax Shelter
Documents obtained by the Globe detail John Kerry's 1983 investment of between $25,000 and $30,000 in offshore companies registered in the Cayman Islands. The document below, signed by Kerry, shows his pledge to purchase 2,470 shares of Peabody Commodities Trading Corp. through Sytel Traders, registered in the Caymans.

Boston Globe
Not bad for guy that has never had a job outside of *public service.

Yup, he knows what good for the little people.
 
which brings me to this tidbit I got in an email...
> Interesting Information about John Kerry
>
>
>
> Check your Heinz bottles
>
>
>
> I checked and my bottle of Heinz catsup says "Product of Canada"
>
>
> Guess I'll be checking out all the Heinz products at the store!
> Shortly after reading the following e-mail content, I happened to
> look at the label of a jar of Heinz sandwich slice pickles.
> Yep...."Made in Mexico."
>
> Check some of your Heinz products Sen. John Kerry keeps talking
> about U.S. corporations leaving this country and setting up shop in
> foreign countries, taking thousands of jobs with them. He is
> right, because that has
> happened. However, he is trying to blame it on George W. Bush. As
> far as I know, Bush has not moved one factory out of this country
> because he is not the owner of a single factory. That cannot be
> said about Kerry and his wife,Teresa Heinz-Kerry. According to the
> Wall Street Journal, the Kerrys own 32 factories in Europe and 18
> in Asia and the Pacific.
>
> In addition, their company, the Heinz Company, leases four
> factories in Europe and four in Asia. Also, they own 27 factories
> in North America, some
> of which are in Mexico and the Caribbean.
>
> I wonder how many hundreds of American workers lost their jobs when
> their plants relocated in foreign countries?
>
> I also wonder if the workers in Mexico and Asia are paid the same
> wages and benefits as workers in the United States. Of course
> they're not. However,
> Kerry demands that other companies that relocate should pay the
> same benefits they did in the U.S.
>
> Why does he not demand this of the Heinz Company, since he is
> married to the owner?
>
> If Kerry is elected, will he and his wife close all those foreign
> factories and bring all those jobs back to America?
> Of course they won't.
>
> They're making millions off that cheap labor.
>
> The labels don't lie, Does Kerry?
>

Thread-buddies Designs
http://www.thread-buddies.com
 
In fact, the average federal tax rate -- combined payroll and income tax -- for a middle-class family is closer to 20% or more. George W. and Laura Bush, who had an income one- tenth of the Kerrys', paid a tax rate of 30%. ...
you know...just as an aside...

our income taxes here are about that rate. yet we have social service upon social service...

maybe some better management is more in order than anything else...wtf are you doing with it all? it hasn't ALWAYS been wartime. :confuse3:
 
Leslie, the US Constitution grants explicit rules regarding what our public servants may or may not do. There is no clause for medical expenses. Nor is there one for first time home buyers. Our tax burden shoud be about 3%. Since we give BILLIONS in aid to so many outside our country some feel the right to break the law.

Section. 8.

The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; but all Duties, Imposts and Excises shall be uniform throughout the United States;

To borrow Money on the credit of the United States;

To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;

To establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization, and uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States;

To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

To provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States;

To establish Post Offices and post Roads;

To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;

To constitute Tribunals inferior to the supreme Court;

To define and punish Piracies and Felonies committed on the high Seas, and Offences against the Law of Nations;

To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water;

To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;

To provide and maintain a Navy;

To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces;

To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions;

To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress;

To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the Acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings;--And

To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.
 
I dun think that Aid really explains it?

foreignaid.jpg


whatever...maybe where tf it's all going is somethin to think on.
 
oh...and I don't really give a flying fuck about yer little badly written piece of paper on which intent of many areas is blurry, from however many eons ago. The times they are a'changin.

it was just a question about where the money is going.
 
Look at that silly graph. That is the % of GDP. 1% of $75trillion beats 10% of 5 billion anyday.
 
Leslie said:
oh...and I don't really give a flying fuck about yer little badly written piece of paper on which intent of many areas is blurry, from however many eons ago. The times they are a'changin.

it was just a question about where the money is going.
When last did Cananda place a space station in orbit, or do something like really impressive and cool? (Ice trucking doesnt count, but it is cool)

BTW, did you guys ever get you new deisel powered used submarine from Europe yet, you know the one stranded, dead in the water. (kidding aside, sorry 'bout dude that died on thoo)
 
And how did your ultra cool/expensive Nuke subs do against those with boxcutters (kidding aside, sorry 'bout several thousand dude/dudettes that died thoo).

:rolleyes:
 
Leslie said:
oh...and I don't really give a flying fuck about yerl ittle badly written piece of paper on which intent of many areas is blurry, from however many eons ago . The times they are a'changin.


It still works wonders. We are still the envy of the world. Why? Because of our little badly written piece of paper on which intent of many areas is blurry, from however many eons ago.

We're not necessarily better. Freedom has it utmost advantages.
 
Gonz said:
Look at that silly graph. That is the % of GDP. 1% of $75trillion beats 10% of 5 billion anyday.
it's a small percent of GDP, which shows that it isn't prolly the big chunk of what your gov't is wasting your tax dollars on. It also isn't its people, through social programs.

not my problem, if you wanna vote big spenders back in go for it :headbang:
 
A.B.Normal said:
And how did your ultra cool/expensive Nuke subs do against those with boxcutters :rolleyes:
Damn good!!! the trick is that you have to fire those Tomahawks before they leave their training camps in the Mideast.

I just wish we had president that was accountable back in the mid 90's. that is where the flaw lies (no pun intended)
 
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