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Demystifying American Taxes - YouTube
Channel: Knowing Better
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Itâs tax season here in America, which means
itâs time for everyone to procrastinate
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and complain about how complicated they are.
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Theyâre really not that complicated.
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But there are people out there with a vested
interest in making you think they are.
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Whether itâs a politician who wants to use
simplifying the tax code as a campaign slogan
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or a company who wants you to sell you their
services in doing them for you.
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If you have a basic understanding of high
school algebra, you already know more than
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you need in order to understand taxes.
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We do make them needlessly complicated here
in America â so for any of you international
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viewers, feel free to compare your system
to ours â but still, theyâre not that
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complicated.
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Letâs start with your paycheck.
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Feel free to tell me how much you make down
below and we can get startedâŠ.
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Okay since youâre apparently not going to
participate weâre going to have to make
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up an example.
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Letâs start with this guy.
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Raynor here.
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Heâs single and makes $30,000 a year.
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Thatâs about twice minimum wage.
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Okay so I rounded down to make the numbers
easier to work with, sue me.
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Please donât sue me.
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Anyway itâs pretty close to the average
individual income here in America.
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He gets paid twice a month, which comes out
to $1250.
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Right on.
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But as you probably all know, thatâs not
what he ends up with.
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In Australia, when you get hired and they
tell you âyou make 30,000 a year,â thatâs
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how much you make, thatâs your take-home
pay, they figure in how much taxes get taken
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out and donât even tell you about it.
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How awesome would that be instead of it being
a mystery up until your first paycheck?!
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Anyway, letâs break down what happens to
that paycheck.
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First, 6.2% comes out for Social Security.
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For those of you not in the United States,
this is the mandatory socialized retirement
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program that everyone pays into and you only
reap the full benefit of when you turn 67.
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That comes out to $77.50.
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Next, 1.45% gets taken out for Medicare.
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For those of you not in the United States,
this is the mandatory socialized healthcare
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program that everyone pays into and you only
reap the full benefit of when you turn 65.
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Apparently, only old people get socialism
here in AmericaâŠ
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That comes out to be $18.13.
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These two together are called FICA â and
the government just takes it and you never
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see it again.
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Well unless you become old enough, I guess.
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The next bit to come out of your paycheck
is income tax, the part that most people do
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incorrectly.
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Weâre going to ignore state income tax and
just focus on federal, becauseâŠ
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I donât want to make 43 different versions
of this video.
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The part of your paycheck that goes towards
federal income tax is called the federal income
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tax withholding.
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You pay a small portion of each paycheck is
withheld, and at the end of the year when
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you âdo your taxesâ you figure out whether
you owe more or more commonly get a refund.
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So how are people messing this up?
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Because how much goes towards your withholding
is based on your income, your filing status,
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and how many allowances you claim.
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This is called a W-4, you filled it out when
you started your job.
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Most people donât even read it and just
put 0 â and this is the worst possible answer.
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This form is asking how many people this income
is meant to support - putting zero means nobody.
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So the government will take the maximum possible
amount.
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People like to claim zero because it gives
them a bigger refund.
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Youâre not getting a refund because of a
defective product or shoddy service, itâs
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because you overpaid.
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But weâll get to that in a moment.
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This guy claims zero, so combining that with
his income and crippling loneliness, the government
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takes 12.3%, which comes out to be $153.70.
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That number is figured out by your employer
using a really complicated set of tables that
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takes all three of those identifiers into
account.
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I wish I could tell you some sort of concrete
number, but it changes for literally everyone.
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So letâs look at someone who works at the
exact same job, for the exact same pay, but
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actually read his W-4.
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Ad victoriam
Enter 1 for yourself if no one else can claim
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you as a dependent.
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Enter 1 if youâre single and only have one
job.
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Or if youâre married or have a second job,
okay that doesnât apply.
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Spouse, nope, dependents, nope, head of, childâŠ
blah blah blah, whatever.
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2.
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He claims two.
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So he gets the same $1250 paycheck, $77.50
out for Social Security, $18.13 out for Medicare,
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but his withholding is different, $103.08,
only 8.3%.
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Thatâs a difference of $50.62 per paycheck.
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The key here is that since they both make
the same amount and they both have the same
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depressing life circumstances, they both owe
the same amount at the end of the year.
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But, weâll get to how we figure that out
in a moment.
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For now, just take my word for it that this
guy gets a $1215.05 refund at the end of the
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year, and this guy gets a $0.17 refund- though
since we round to the nearest dollar, no refund.
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This is usually the point where the guy who
claimed zero celebrates his gift from the
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government and laughs at the guy who claimed
two for doing his taxes wrong.
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But did he?
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He already has all of that money in the bank,
so it actually evens out.
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That guy just has a more accurate withholding
which lets him keep more of his own money
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each paycheck.
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So, read your W-4, donât just write zero.
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If you already work somewhere, ask for a new
W-4.
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Say this was a cell phone bill and you owed
$60 a month, but you decide to play it safe
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and pay $70 a month, so you get a $120 refund
at the end of the year.
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You would seriously reconsider how much youâre
paying every month⊠at least I hope you
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would.
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Your refund is not a gift from the government,
youâre not sticking it to anyone by getting
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a refund, youâre getting it because youâre
overpaying.
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No, you canât tell your employer to take
out nothing for income tax, despite what any
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Sovereign Citizen might tell you.
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The government totally has the power to tax
personal income.
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Thereâs also a number of youtube videos
that tell you how to get out of paying taxes
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by claiming 9 or 10.
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Unless youâre John and Kate plus Eight,
donât do that.
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You can actually claim more than nine or ten
but at that point youâre just being a pain
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to your employer, not the government.
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Itâs a logarithmic function, youâll get
it infinitely close to zero, but youâll
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never actually get to zero.
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If you donât pay your income taxes, they
will eventually send someone with a gun to
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your house.
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And most likely, youâre going to get everything
you paid in taxes back anyway, so itâs just
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not worth it â pay your taxes.
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Letâs figure out how much this guy owes.
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Anyway, here is where weâre going to dispel
a few more myths.
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We use a progressive tax system here in America,
which means the more money you make the more
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that money is taxed.
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Actually, most countries use this system.
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Itâs a common misconception that if you
make this much money, youâre taxed at this
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rate, but if you make just one dollar more,
all of your money is taxed at a higher rate.
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Which just isnât true, so letâs look at
how it works.
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Weâre going to be working with the 2017
brackets since thatâs what youâll be filing
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your taxes under this year, near the end Iâll
talk about the 2018 changes.
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Like the other guy, heâs single and makes
$30,000 a year.
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The first $9325 is taxed at 10% - so of that,
he owes $932.50.
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The remaining $20,675 is taxed at 15%, coming
out to $3101.25.
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So, in total he owes $4033.75.
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Well that wasnât a very good example, it
only crosses two brackets.
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Alright, letâs look at his boss.
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One Enclave, One America.
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Who is also single but makes $100,000 a year.
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Again, the first $9325 is taxed at 10%.
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The 15% bracket goes up to $37,950, which
means only $28625 of his income is taxed at
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that rate.
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The next bracket goes up to $91,900 and is
taxed at 25%.
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And his final $8100 is taxed at 28%.
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His final tax bill is $20,981.75, so even
though his income falls into the 28% bracket,
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not all of his income is taxed at that rate.
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28% is what is called his top marginal tax
rate, while his effective tax rate is only
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20.98%
There are other proposed tax systems, like
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the regressive system, which means the more
money you make the less that money is taxed.
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Which obviously disproportionately benefits
the rich, which is why no country on earth
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uses it.
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And then there is the flat tax, which means
all income is taxed at the same rate, which
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sounds fair⊠which is why every few years
someone tries to push for it.
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But letâs look at it in practice.
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In order for a flat tax to work, it would
have to be high enough that the government
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doesnât lose any revenue.
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In order to keep that same level of revenue,
it would have to be something like 36%, which
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is insane.
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So letâs use a number that has been proposed
before â 18%.
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This guy would see his taxes go up and this
guy would see his taxes go down.
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Just like the regressive system, it disproportionately
helps the wealthy.
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Imagine if he was making millions or even
billions of dollars.
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In 2012, a presidential candidate suggested
a 9-9-9 plan, which included a 9% flat income
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tax, which is excessively low, but introduced
a new 9% national sales tax to make up the
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difference.
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So effectively, your federal taxes would be
18% total.
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In the US, sales tax is a local and state
consumption tax on only certain goods.
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Essential items like food are not taxed.
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But for frivolous items like cars, tvs, and
tampons, it gets a little messy⊠gross.
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Tampons should not be taxed.
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Since itâs state and local, it changes city
to city, but on average itâs 7%.
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Adding a national 9% sales tax would suddenly
mean everything costs 16% more than what it
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says on the price tag.
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In Ireland itâs called the Value Added Tax,
or VAT, and itâs 23% nationwide But you
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wouldnât know it, because that price is
figured into the price tag â itâs not
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a surprise when you get to the register.
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Why do we have to go and make things so complicated?
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Speaking of complicated, while I figured out
the tax brackets, Iâm sure some of you were
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furiously writing out comments about how I
forgot about deductions, exemptions, and credits.
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I didnât forget, it said that in the bottom
cor- letâs explain those now.
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Letâs just focus in on this guy, but since
heâs single, he doesnât really qualify
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for any of the fun stuff.
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So letâs complicate things by giving him
custody of one child.
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Ad victoriam.
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Letâs not make him married though, lifeâs
hard enough as it is.
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But since he now has a dependent, he gets
to file as head of household, so the brackets
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get all messed up.
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Leave it to a kid to make a mess of things.
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The first $13350 is taxed at 10% and the remaining
$16650 is taxed at 15%.
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The first deduction he is going to take is
the Standard Deduction, which for head of
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household, is $9350.
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He could itemize, which means individually
deducting state income tax, social security
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and medicare, donations to charity, and even
things like sales tax, but â For most people,
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almost always, the Standard Deduction is higher.
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Unless you have some incredibly complicated
tax situation or make enormous amounts of
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money, which most of you donât, just take
the Standard Deduction.
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Then he is going to claim two Personal Exemptions,
one for him, one for his child, totaling $8100.
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These two numbers, the Standard Deduction
and Personal Exemptions, are subtracted from
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his overall income of $30,000, meaning he
is only taxed on $12550.
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It would be nice if we lived in a country
where they just said your first however many
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dollars werenât taxed, that system would
make so much more sense.
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But as far as I know, no such country exists,
so weâre left with having to do math.
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So thatâs it, his income only falls into
the 10% bracket, so he owes $1255.
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But thatâs not the entire story, because
while deductions reduce the amount of income
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you are taxed on, credits reduce the amount
of taxes you owe.
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There are all sorts of credits, like if you
bought an electric car or installed solar
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panels on your house, but weâre just going
to focus on the most popular two.
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The Child Tax Credit is just $1000 per child,
nice and easy.
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Now he only owes $255.
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Then there is the Earned Income Credit, which
is complicated because it scales depending
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on income.
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Itâs not a case of, if you make below this
amount you get it, if you make above it you
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donât.
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So if youâve ever thought to yourself âif
I made just a hundred dollars less, I would
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have gotten that credit.â
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If youâre that close to the line, the credit
is worth single digits.
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But for this guy, itâs $1536.
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Which means on top of getting back all of
his federal income tax withholding from his
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paychecks throughout the year, the government
owes him an additional $1281.
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This is why an estimated 45% of Americans
pay no federal income tax, because of the
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deductions and credits from having kids and
stuff.
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But since weâre still dealing with 2017,
I would be remiss if I didnât mention the
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opposite of credits â penalties.
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If you didnât have health insurance in 2017,
you owe the government at least $695 per person.
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Either you owe in in addition to your taxes
or it gets taken out of your refund.
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But that penalty is going away in 2018 thanks
to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.
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I promised I would talk about the 2018 changes,
so here we go.
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Letâs start with this guy, single making
$30,000 a year.
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He got a $6350 Standard Deduction and $4050
Personal Exemption and no credits, so he owes
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$2473.75, an effective tax rate of 8.25%.
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The brackets shift a little bit and his top
bracket is now only 12%, but the biggest change
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is the near-doubling of the Standard Deduction
to $12,000.
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However, this is offset by the fact that the
new plan completely eliminates Personal Exemptions.
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So in the end, he now owes $1969.50, a savings
of $504.25.
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Now for the rich guy.
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In 2017, he owed $18,138.50.
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Again, his Standard Deduction and Personal
Exemption are rolled into one Standard Deduction,
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totaling $12,000, and the brackets shift a
bit again.
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His top bracket is now only 24% and his tax
burden falls to $15409.50, a reduction of
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$2729.
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And lastly, the complicated guy, earning $30,000
with one child as head of household.
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In 2017, he got a Standard Deduction and 2
Personal Exemptions, totaling $17,450.
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Those have been bundled together for a Standard
Deduction of $18,000.
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The Child Tax Credit doubles to $2000, and
the Earned Income Credit creeps up slightly
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to $1662.
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So he will now get a refund of $2462, almost
double what he got for 2017.
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The 2018 plan helps almost everyone â it
helps some people a lot more than others,
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but still, it helps most everyone.
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At times it seems like our system is incredibly
confusing when compared to others, and sometimes
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it seems like itâs that way on purpose.
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But it isnât that confusing â I explained
it to you in only 15 minutes or so.
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Odds are that most of you are completely capable
of doing your own taxes, you donât need
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to pay someone else.
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You can either do them with paper and pencil
or using something like TurboTax, either way
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â you can still do it yourself.
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And before you feel compelled to ask me a
question down below about your specific tax
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situation â Iâm playing with funkopops
and monopoly money, donât ask me!
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You really should know better⊠hey!
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So what are you going to do with your refund?
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Did you know I have a patreon?
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Because I have a patreon⊠if youâd like
to see more videos like this, consider donating
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a dollar or two and donât forget to credit
that subscribe button.
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Also make sure to follow me on twitter and
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