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Tax Increases for Wealthy Has Negligible Impact on Economic Growth

Asterix

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

As usual I like to be no big no small
Contradict Lightning's scaremongering
With cold hard facts from true democracy
Free press keeps citizens well informed

Wealthiest Pay Higher Taxes With Scant U.S. Economic Harm

As the political fight over raising taxes for high-income Americans fades away, so are predictions for negative economic fallout.
The bill for President Barack Obama’s 2013 tax increases comes due April 15, and the first boost in marginal income rates in 20 years is already reducing the U.S. budget deficit without tipping the economy into recession.

“In advance one always hears the squeals of the oxen who would like everyone to think they are about to be gored,” said James Galbraith, an economist at the University of Texas at Austin. “Then it turns out that they are only nicked, and life goes on.”

The U.S. government is projected to collect more than $3 trillion for the first time in the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, a 9.2 percent increase over last year, according to the Congressional Budget Office. CBO forecasts another 9 percent rise in 2015 and estimates that more than half of the increases in revenue stem from tax law changes.

Because of tax increases, spending cuts and economic growth, the federal budget deficit is projected to be 3 percent of gross domestic product this year. That’s less than half its 2012 level and the smallest budget deficit since 2007.

In January 2013, just after President George W. Bush’s tax cuts expired, Congress reset the top marginal income tax rate at 39.6 percent, the same level it reached under President Bill Clinton.

Additional Levies

High-income taxpayers face additional levies, effective in 2013, to help pay for Obama’s health-care plan. That means those at the very top of the U.S. income scale face higher marginal tax rates than at any time since 1986.

The increases started generating revenue for the government in late 2012, when taxpayers began accelerating capital gains and bonus income to avoid paying at the higher rates.

The high-income tax increase sapped 0.25 percentage points from GDP in 2013, estimates Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania. That slight economic drag, he said, shouldn’t continue.

“For the most part, by summertime, the negative effects on the economy will have abated,” he said. “Most of the pain has been felt.”

No Push

Even congressional Republicans, who warned that the tax increases would destroy jobs, aren’t making a serious push to repeal them. They’re acting as though the new tax rates and increased take for the U.S. government are here to stay, even if they don’t like it.
House Republicans’ budget plan and draft tax-code revamp call for reshuffling the tax system in ways that would reduce top rates without reducing the amount of money the government collects. Also, the tax plan was designed so it wouldn’t cut the share of taxes paid by top earners.

Senate Republicans didn’t include a major rollback of Obama’s tax increases in their latest job-creation plan, instead focusing on repealing the 2010 health-care law and blocking regulations that would limit energy production.

That’s a concession to political reality, said Orrin Hatch of Utah, the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee.

“We know we can’t do it with Democrats in control of the Senate,” he said, “so it’s going to be a feckless effort.”

Undoing Cuts

It took Obama two presidential campaigns, four years in office and a past-the-wire legislative fight at the end of 2012 to undo a fraction of the tax cuts secured by his predecessor. Obama prevailed two years after he signed a temporary extension of the Bush tax cuts.

The result set the top marginal income tax at 39.6 percent, up from 35 percent, starting at $450,000 of taxable income for married couples and $400,000 for individuals in 2013. The top basic rate on capital gains and dividends rose to 20 percent from 15 percent.

Congress also reinstated limits on itemized deductions and personal exemptions for top earners. Those affect married couples with adjusted gross income of more than $300,000 and individuals with income of more than $250,000.

On top of all that, tax increases for the highest earners from the 2010 Affordable Care Act took effect in 2013. That amounts to a 3.8 percent tax on net investment income and a 0.9 percent tax on wages. Those taxes start at $250,000 of annual income for married couples and $200,000 for individuals.

A married couple with about $915,000 in annual income will pay $277,426 in payroll and income taxes for 2013, up 12 percent from 2012. That’s according to an example created by the Tax Policy Center in Washington.

Individual Returns

The people affected by the tax increases include corporate executives, lawyers, doctors and people who report their business profits on their individual tax returns.

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Much of the economic damage caused by the tax increases of 2013 had nothing to do with the expiration of the Bush tax cuts.

Instead, the lapse of a 2-percentage-point payroll tax reduction took money out of consumers’ pockets at all income levels, said Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jeffries LLC.

‘More Painful’

“It put a bite on consumer cash flows,” he said. “The payroll tax, frankly, was more painful in some sense than the higher marginal tax rates.”

That change ended four years of expanded paychecks because of the payroll tax cut and its predecessor, the Making Work Pay tax credit Obama campaigned on in 2008.
According to Zandi’s estimates, the payroll tax cut subtracted 0.6 percentage points from U.S. economic growth, more than twice the effect of the high-income tax cuts.

The expiration of the payroll tax cut meant that a worker earning $60,000 a year had $100 less per month in take-home pay.

The question of how much tax-law changes affect the economy also plays out in states, where lawmakers have cut taxes in an effort to provide a jolt to businesses or raised them to bridge budget gaps that persisted after the recession.

California in November 2012 approved a temporary increase in the tax on retail sales and set a nation-high tax bracket of 13.3 percent on incomes of more than $1 million. Opponents warned that it would extract a toll in lost jobs, as businesses cut costs or fled to other states.

California’s Example

The reality in California, now benefiting from a reviving real-estate market, has been different. While job growth slowed in 2013 from a year earlier, employers still expanded payrolls by 2.6 percent, faster than the 1.7 percent pace in the U.S., according to U.S. Labor Department data compiled by Bloomberg.

“There’s just no evidence that the income tax increases have had any substantial impact on California’s economic growth,” said Christopher Thornberg, founding partner of Beacon Economics LLC, a Los Angeles-based economic consulting firm. “It just is not the primary driving force the way some people think it is.”

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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...igher-taxes-with-scant-u-s-economic-harm.html
 

The_Hypocrite

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I wonder if the next Republican president will do a George Bush Jnr again...n bring about the next deficit...
 

johnny333

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Doubt the next US Prez will be a Republican. They are out of touch with the current citizens who are not white angmos e.g. latino. Even among the whites they have alienated many with their anti-gay & anti-abortions stance.
 

frenchbriefs

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With 39.6% tax rate maybe we will see more millionaires migrating to Singapore.right now our gini coefficient is 2nd highest among developed countries....soon we will be number 1 in the world...again!!!
 

AungSanSuShi

Alfrescian
Loyal
With 39.6% tax rate maybe we will see more millionaires migrating to Singapore.right now our gini coefficient is 2nd highest among developed countries....soon we will be number 1 in the world...again!!!
LHL's brother is in the wealth management sector now. He is actively getting those 22 Russian billionaires who are blacklisted in the US to park their ill-gotten funds here in Sinkapore. The US intelligence is aware of what is going on in Sinkapore. BTW did you know that the US intelligence services know that the current crop of Myanmar's leaders, including President Thein Sein, have their million $ bribes parked in Sinkapore? With the opening up of Myanmar to FDI, many top Burmese leaders are asking for million $ bribes to approve projects.
 

Asterix

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Obama’s Shrinking Budget Deficits Silence Foreign Fiscal Critics

Six months ago, global finance officials meeting in Washington berated the U.S. for failing to put its fiscal house in order. This time, the critics were silent.

The Congressional Budget Office is projecting the 2014 deficit will be the lowest in six years and down more than 60 percent from the record $1.4 trillion in 2009. With the annual April 15 tax filing deadline looming, the U.S. has received about $80 billion more in income taxes this fiscal year than it had 12 months earlier.

The Treasury’s coffers are swelling as the almost five-year economic expansion gains momentum, generating more corporate and personal income-tax revenue and reducing spending on social services. Stronger growth, in turn, will depend less on government spending to fuel growth than it has in the past.

“Without fiscal stimulus, we’ll see over the next year or two if the economy is really standing on its own two feet,” said Ira Jersey, a fixed-income and interest-rate strategist at Credit Suisse Group AG in New York. “We suspect it is. This means further improvement of the deficit over the next few years.”

The latest evidence of fiscal health came last week, when the Treasury Department reported a deficit of $36.9 billion, the smallest for that month in 14 years. Revenue increased 16 percent to $215.8 billion from $186 billion in March 2013. Spending totaled $252.7 billion, down 13.6 percent.

Corporate tax revenue may climb further as accelerating growth and declining unemployment boost sales and earnings. The International Monetary Fund, in a report last week, forecast a U.S. expansion of 2.8 percent this year and 3 percent in 2015, compared with 1.9 percent last year.

Japan, Europe

The U.S. is strengthening as other developed economies struggle to grow. The 18-country euro area will expand 1.2 percent this year and 1.5 percent in 2015, according to IMF projections. Japan, the world’s third-largest economy, will gain 1.4 percent in 2014 followed by 1 percent the year after.

“The United States recovery continues to gain strength, while other countries continue to adjust and reform,” Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew said in an April 11 statement during meetings in Washington held by the IMF and World Bank.

Things were different when central bankers and finance ministers of the world’s 20 biggest industrial and developing countries met in Washington in October. Then, the U.S. was in the midst of a partial government shutdown with politicians locked in a stalemate over raising the federal debt ceiling.

Debt Limit

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde urged the U.S. at the time to show leadership and warned that failure to lift the debt limit risked triggering a global recession. The administration of Barack Obama and Republicans in Congress eventually agreed to end the 16-day shutdown and suspended the $16.7 trillion limit.

Now, Michael Darda, chief economist at MKM Partners LLC in Stamford, Connecticut, estimates the U.S. deficit fell to 2.9 percent of gross domestic product in the first quarter from a peak of more than 10 percent in 2009.

Among the reasons, he said in an April 11 note: “a sustained, albeit moderate, economic recovery” and the 2013 automatic spending cuts and tax increases known as sequestration.

The deficit will shrink to $514 billion this year from $680 billion in 2013, according to the CBO, which is projecting a gap of $478 billion in 2015. After that, the deficit will start rising every year, reaching $1 trillion by 2022.

The increase will be driven by “dramatically” rising Medicare and Social Security payments needed to care for an aging society, said Jersey of Credit Suisse.

Fiscal Drag

For now, a slower pace of decline in the budget deficit will provide a tonic for the economy because fiscal “drag” -- the contractionary effect of reduced fiscal stimulus -- is abating, says Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP LLC in Jersey City, New Jersey.

“If the projected declines over the next couple of years were larger as a percentage of GDP, they would be giving rise to more fears about fiscal drag,” he said.
The lessening fiscal headwinds and an improving labor market are among the reasons the Federal Reserve is pulling back on the monthly bond purchases intended to spur growth and employment.

The near-term outlook isn’t without concerns. Last week was the worst for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since 2012. Investor worries included disappointing results at JPMorgan Chase & Co. and signs that hedge funds were dumping the bull market’s top performers.

Consumer Confidence

Still, Americans are growing more upbeat as job prospects improve. Consumer confidence rose in April to the highest level since July (CONSSENT), according to the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of sentiment released last week.

Payrolls excluding government agencies rose by 192,000 workers in March after a 188,000 gain in February that was larger than first estimated, according to Labor Department figures released April 4. That brought the job count to 116.1 million, exceeding the pre-recession peak for the first time.

Lew, in his April 11 statement, said the U.S. expansion “is expected to strengthen further this year as private-sector demand increases, the fiscal drag lessens, and household balance sheets and the housing market continue to improve.”

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...-deficits-silence-foreign-fiscal-critics.html
 
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