In the US, every day is tax day

25/4/22
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The deadline for filing US federal income taxes is later than usual this year. Tax Day was pushed back to April 18 to avoid coinciding with the District of Columbia’s Emancipation Day holiday.

However, Americans don’t just pay taxes one day out of the year. Taxes are a part of their everyday lives, whether they’re conscious of it or not. Many politicians prefer that Americans don’t notice how much they’re taxed. And, so, taxes are often buried in the cost of products or subtly taken from our paychecks.

The largest and most recognised US tax is the personal income tax. It’s the reason for Tax Day. Federal tax rates on personal income range from 10 to 37 per cent. Forty-one states layer on additional income taxes. In places like New York City, the top combined federal, state and local income tax rate exceeds 50 per cent.

For young adults entering the job market, the first tax they may notice is the payroll tax. Looking at their pay stubs, they are often shocked to see 6.2 per cent was taken out for Social Security and 1.45 per cent for Medicare.

What they may not realise, though, is that their employers also paid that same amount in Social Security and Medicare taxes. Since that’s part of the cost of hiring someone, that amount is also built into the paycheck – in the form of lower wages. Effectively, the federal government takes a 15.3 per cent cut of most workers’ wages just to fund entitlements, double what shows up on their pay stubs.

When workers go to spend that paycheck, they may have to pay a sales tax of nine per cent or more, depending on the state. And while states’ general sales taxes are usually visible, other taxes are better camouflaged.

At the gas pump, for example, Americans will pay combined state and federal gasoline taxes of about 31 cents per gallon in most states. When buying diesel in California, taxes will cost drivers 93 cents per gallon, in addition to the state’s 9.25 per cent sales tax. Even if you don’t buy diesel, those taxes will still take a bite out of your wallet; they increase the price of most consumer products because they are transported by diesel trucks.

Federal taxes also drive up the cost of vehicles themselves with, for example, a 25 per cent tariff on imported steel and a 10 per cent tariff on imported aluminum. Americans paid about $87 billion in tariffs on imported products in 2021.

How about renters? Many don’t realise they’re paying property taxes, since the landlords write those checks. But those checks are funded by the rent.

After paying all these taxes, some folks may still have some savings to invest. Suppose you buy stock in a US corporation. The company will put those funds to use, and whatever profit it earns will face corporate taxes at a 21 per cent federal rate and a five per cent rate in a typical state.

But for the government, why tax something once, when it can tax it two or three times?

After taxing corporate profits – not to mention the wages that went into the investment – the government will take a cut of the same profits when they’re distributed to shareholders. When the corporation pays a dividend, the shareholder may be subject to an additional 15 or 20 per cent federal tax, not to mention state capital gains taxes, which typically add about five per cent.

Ultimately, these taxes don’t just hit investors, though. Corporate taxes notoriously drive down workers’ real wages.

Maybe the most damaging hidden tax in the government’s arsenal, though, is inflation.

Compared to the same time last year, consumer prices are up 8.5 per cent.

Between the Federal Reserve, Congress and the White House, the government’s strategy for the last two years has been to print money and dump it into the economy. Spending with reckless abandon, the federal government has racked up more than $6 trillion of new debt in that time. After flooding the economy with dollars, little wonder that each dollar is worth less.

Inflation hits everyone and everything. Food prices are up 8.8 per cent from last year, new vehicles 12.5 per cent, electricity and gas utilities 13.5 per cent, used vehicles 35.3 per cent, and gasoline 48 per cent.

Whether it’s funded by taxes or deficits, American workers ultimately pay a steep price for unbridled government spending. And they’re paying it every day. Elected officials at all levels should be more prudent with taxpayer dollars. They should also be more honest and should stop pretending spending won’t cost us.

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All comments [ 10 ]


Duncan 25/4/22 14:12

Taxes are a part of American everyday lives, whether they’re conscious of it or not

Enda Thompson 25/4/22 14:14

The largest and most recognised US tax is the personal income tax

Egan 25/4/22 14:16

with such taxing system, the poor American is really hard to efford for their demand and saving money for kids

Kevin Evans 25/4/22 14:23

Tax is a tool for the Gov to regulate society, but it should not be used to overtake the money from the people like in the US

Jacky Thomas 25/4/22 14:26

The US has issued a lot of tax for American people, there are no country that has much tax as the US

Swift Hoodie 25/4/22 14:28

the taxing system of the US is unfair, the reach will be more rich, the poor will be more poor, and the gap will be widen

Wilson Pit 25/4/22 14:32

The United States cannot prosper and remain a so-called standard democracy when so few have so much and so many have so little.

Allforcountry 25/4/22 14:34

the issue of income and wealth inequality is one of the great moral, economic and political crises that the US has been facing

John Smith 25/4/22 14:36

half of American people are living paycheck to paycheck, 500,000 of the very poorest are homeless, millions are worried about evictions

Gentle Moon 25/4/22 14:40

The American dream seems to be just on films or novels

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