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How tax breaks help the rich - YouTube
Channel: Vox
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The United States has a problem with income inequality.
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People have different ideas about
why this is happening.
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CEO pay climbs every single year without exception.
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The United States has lost 5 million manufacturing jobs since the year 2000.
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big shifts that's happened in the economy
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that is lead in part to a decline in union membership.
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But one if the biggest drivers of inequality is hiding here, in these 2,000 pages.
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It's the US tax code.
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President Trump and Republicans in Congress have a plan to alter that code.
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and if they get their way it'll get even better for the richest Americans.
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First let's look at a few things that Trump and the Republicans
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don't want to change about the tax code.
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the charitable deduction and
the mortgage interest deduction.
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Here's how they favor the rich:
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Let's say Dan makes $100 donation to his church.
He makes about $30,000 a year.
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Roughly, the median income for individuals in the US.
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Which puts him in the 15% tax bracket.
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It means he would save at most $15 on his taxes.
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But let's say Dan's boss Steve makes the same donation to his church.
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Steve makes $500,000 a year which puts him in the top tax bracket.
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And the same $100 donation could save Steve $39.60 on his taxes.
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Dan and Steve give the same amount to their church
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but Steve saves more than twice as much.
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Small examples like this add up.
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People making $100,000 or more account for about 57% of all the charitable contributions in the US
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but they get 76% of the tax benefits.
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This deduction is also really expensive.
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The US spends $70,000,000,000 a year on it.
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More than eight times what it spends on Head Start the federally funded preschool program
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and more than twice what it spends on Pell grants for low-income students to go to college.
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Plus there's all kinds of ways to bend the rules.
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Billionaire Mitchell Rales gets tax break for donating his collection of modern art
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to a museum that he built right next door to his house.
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A museum that's only open for private tours.
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But the worst thing about about the charitable deduction?
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There's not great evidence that it works.
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Turns out you don't need a tax break to
encourage people to be generous to others.
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In the 1980's the top tax rate
for the richest people was 70%
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and through a series of reforms it dropped to 28%
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and the Council on Foundations, it's kind of a trade group for charities,
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said, 'Oh my God, you do that we're going to lose all our contributions.'
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Guess what? No difference. People gave just as much with a much lower tax rate.
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Austria, Finland, Ireland, Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, and New Zealand
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have all gotten rid of their deductions for charitable contributions
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and that hasn't had an impact on
donation rates.
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One easy way to make things more fair?
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Replace the tax deduction with a tax credit.
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If Dan and Steve both give $100 to their church,
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give them each a $15 tax credit.
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That's how they do it in Canada.
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A tax credit reduces the amount you owe, so the same donation gets the same benefit
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no matter how rich you are.
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There's another tax deduction that's a boon for the wealthy.
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The mortgage interest deduction costs about $100,000,000,000 a year to the Treasury.
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We could use that money to treat wounded veterans, to build hospitals, to build highways
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but instead we give it to rich homeowners.
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Here's how it works:
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Let's say Dan buys a house for $100,000.
He doesn't pay for that all at once.
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Each month he writes a check to the bank for $1,000.
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Let's say $800 goes to paying for the house,
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and the bank keeps $200. That's interest!
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Dan writes twelve of these checks a year, so he pays $2,400 a year in interest.
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The mortgage interest deduction let's Dan subtract that interest from his taxable income
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which could save him as much as $362.
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"Nice," thinks Dan, that is until he hears about Steve.
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Steve also buys a house for $100,000.
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He also writes a $1,000 check each month paying $200 in interest.
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So after a year, Steve can also deduct the $2,400 from his taxable income.
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But that same deduction can save Steve more than $960.
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Nearly three times as much as Dan for the exact same mortgage payments.
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It doesn't stop there. Steve can buy a second home, deduct the interest, and save even more.
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Or he can get a mortgage for his yacht, count it as a second home, and deduct the interest.
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Sorry Dan, your fishing boat doesn't count.
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There are deductions everywhere.
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The money you lose from gambling? Deduct it.
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Fancy business dinners? Yep.
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Money you put in a retirement account? That too.
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You can even deduct the fees you pay an accountant to help you find more deductions.
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And while theoretically Dan could take advantage of these same deductions
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the fact is, people like Steve benefit a whole lot more.
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People who make about $400,000 a year or more make up about 5% of taxpayers
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but they get more than half the benefits from these tax deductions.
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Now there's a third part of the tax code that Trump and the Republicans want to keep
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and it's even better for the richest Americans than all of these deductions
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The preferred rate for capital gains. Here's how it works:
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According to the US tax code, there are two different kinds of income.
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Earned income is when you go to work and somebody pays you a salary or wage a paycheck.
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That's earned income and we have a whole set of income tax rates for that income that go up to 39.6%.
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This is where Dan and Steve's tax rates come from.
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Unearned income means guys who trade paper.
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Guys who sell stock or buy commodities and then sell it.
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Invest in real estate properties and then sell them.
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That's capital income and we tax that at a lower rate.
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Let's say Steve earns $500,000 a year as a surgeon
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and Laurie earns the same amount as a hedge fund manager.
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Even though their income is the same, Steve's tax rate is 39.6%
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but Laurie's tax rate is nearly half that, 23.8%.
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So Steve ends up with a much higher tax bill.
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This is why billionaire investor Warren Buffet pays a lower tax rate than his secretary.
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His money comes from capital gains while hers comes from a salary.
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Debbie works just as hard as I do and she pays at twice the rate I pay.
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Ronald Reagan thought the same thing.
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Reagan had been a very high, high bracket taxpayer.
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In fact, he paid at the 90% rate in the 1950s. He was a movie star.
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His accountant kept telling him well sign these documents and that'll shift your income
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from labor to capital income and Reagan saw that that was hokey.
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Why should that be?
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Reagan's landmark 1986 tax bill tax capital income and labor income at the same rate.
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People said, "Oh my God, you can't do that. Then nobody will invest. Investments will plummet."
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This chart shows the value of the S&P 500, a stock market metric that measures
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how well big businesses are doing.
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After Reagan raised the capital gains rate in 1986, businesses continued to prosper.
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Reagan's successors, George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton also raise taxes and the on the wealthiest Americans.
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And the 1990s saw America's longest period of consecutive economic growth ever.
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But the changes that Donald Trump and Republicans in Congress
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want to make to the tax code look very different.
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While the Trump and GOP plans get rid of some deductions
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neither gets rid of the charitable
contribution or mortgage interest deductions
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Both plans would lower taxes on capital income for people like Laurie the hedge fund manager.
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And both plans would reduce the number of tax brackets from seven to three.
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and cut the top tax rate. Which would mean big tax savings for someone like Steve
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and minimal savings for working and middle-class people like Dan.
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Rather than working to reduce the growing gap between the richest Americans and everyone else
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these new tax plans would make that gap even wider.
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