Even
Yahoo! News (via the Associated Press) is reporting that the expiring tax cuts hit taxpayers at every level:
WASHINGTON – Here’s some pressure for lawmakers: If they don’t reach agreement on extending soon-to-expire Bush-era tax cuts, nearly all their constituents back home will get big tax increases.
A typical family of four with a household income of $50,000 a year would have to pay $2,900 more in taxes in 2011, according to a new analysis by Deloitte Tax LLP, a tax consulting firm.
That’s
on top of the $9,058 in income tax that is already being paid on a $50,000 income. So, that $50,000 income is now $38,042.
But wait, there’s more. Employees pay an addition 6.2% tax on that $50,000 for Social Security (i.e. $3100); self-employed workers also pay the employer’s 6.2% share (i.e. another $3100). So, that $50,000 income is now either $34,942 (for employees) or $31,842 (for self-employed).
Don’t forget Medicare taxes: 1.45% of employee’s income ($725), 2.9% of self-employed income (another $725). So that $50,000 income is now either $34,217 (for employees) or $33,492 (for self-employed).
Do the math: 1.2% tax on the first $7,000 for unemployment insurance tax, plus state and local income taxes (in most states), plus sales taxes, plus property taxes, plus city and county taxes for schools/hospitals/other services. The poverty level for families of 4, for all states (except Alaska and Hawaii) and for the District of Columbia is $22,050!
Some cities even collect income tax on not only residents but non-residents employed in the city – even when the non-resident works temporarily in the city. In 1992 the city of Philadelphia began enforcing the collection of city wage taxes on visiting baseball players who played games in Philadelphia.
Then there’s this example (from the
New York State Department of Taxation and Finance Publication 88):
If you file a joint federal return and:
- both spouses are nonresidents and both have New York source income, or
- one spouse is a part-year resident and the other is a nonresident with New York source income, or
- both spouses are part-year resident,
you must file a joint New York State return using
Married filing joint return as your filing status. Both spouses must sign the return and will generally be jointly and severally (individually) liable for the entire tax, penalty, or interest due.
Taxing the non-resident spouse of a part-year resident! No wonder
1.5 million, or 8 percent of its population, have left that state since 2000.