http://cepr.net/blogs/beat-the-press/vox-on-the-bernie-sanders-tax-tsunami

Vox on the Bernie Sanders Tax Tsunami
Published: 29 March 2016

I'm tied up with many other things, but since folks asked, I will give a
quick comment/explanation of the Vox analysis
<http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/3/25/11293258/tax-plan-calculator-2016>
of
Bernie Sanders' tax plans. For those who haven't seen it, Vox put together
a calculator that allows people to plug in their income and then see how
their tax bill would change under the tax plans proposed by Donald Trump,
Ted Cruz, Hillary Clinton, and Bernie Sanders. For the first two, most
people get tax cuts. There is little change with Clinton, but big tax
increases with Sanders.

For example, I took a single person with one kid, who earns $30,000 a year.
According to the tax calculator, this person would see an increase in their
tax bill of $3,680 as a result of the Sanders' tax package. I can't quite
follow the math here, because the calculator says that Sanders plan gives
this a person a tax rate of 18.1 percent, compared with 10.3 percent for
the current system. This implies an increase in the tax rate of 7.8
percentage points of this person's income. But 7.8 percentage points of
$30,000 would get you $2,340 not the $3,680 indicated by the calculator.

Okay, but let's ignore the math problem and get to the underlying issues.
Most of the basis for this tax increase for moderate income workers is
Sanders' tax to pay for his universal Medicare plan. This would impose a
payroll tax on employers of 6.2 percent and a 2.2 tax on individuals for
income in excess of the standard deduction (roughly $9,500 for this
person). There is also a 0.2 percentage point tax increase to cover the
cost of paid family leave. In addition, some of the other taxes will have
feedback that will affect moderate income earners, but these taxes are the
bulk of the story.



So let's focus on the roughly 8.0 percentage point increase in taxes
associated with the health care plan. Most of this is money paid by the
employer. Vox is not wrong to count it, since the conventional view among
economists (which I share) is that this is effectively money out of
workers' pockets. In other words, if the government were not taxing the
money away, employers would be paying it to workers.

But the flip side of this coin is that if we count the employer paid tax as
implicitly a tax on workers, then we also have to count it as part of their
income. This matters a little bit with this calculation, since our worker
with a $30,000 income would actually have an income of $32,295 in Voxland,
since the employer is paying a total of 7.65 percent ($2,295) in Social
Security and Medicare payroll taxes for this worker.

However this is the less important part of the story. Suppose that this
worker currently has employer provided health care insurance, as most
workers still do. That costs the employer roughly $6,000 a year on average.
In this case the worker's Voxland pay is $38,295.

Now tax man Sanders comes along. Again, I don't fully understand the dollar
calculation of Vox's tax increase, but let's just use the $3,680 increase
in the tax bill it attributes to this person under the Sanders' plan. While
their tax bill does rise by this amount, their before tax income will rise
by $6,000 since the employer is no longer paying for the workers' health
care premium. Under standard economic assumptions, this $6,000 would end up
in the workers' paychecks. (No, this doesn't necessarily happen
immediately, nor with all workers. Of course the rise in an employer side
payroll tax also doesn't necessarily come immediately out everyone's
paychecks either.)

Anyhow, so the net in Voxland is that this person has $2,320 more in their
paycheck every year under the Bernie Sanders' tax plan than under the
current system. It reports this as a higher tax rate because more money is
being paid to the government, but they nonetheless have more after-tax
income because they are paying less money to the insurance industry (i.e.
an insurance industry tax).

There are plenty of reasonable questions about whether the Sanders health
care plan will work as promised, but folks should be clear, if it does, it
means they will generally have much more money in their pockets. (I didn't
even account for savings on out of pocket health care expenses under the
Sanders plan.)

So if all folks care about is how much money they pay to the government in
taxes, then the Vox calculator is a useful tool. However if they are
interested in how much money they will have in their pockets under the
different candidates' proposals, they will need to do a deeper analysis.
(In fairness, Vox does make a point of noting the additional services
provided under Sanders and the reduction in services under the Republicans,
but that disclaimer may be lost on many people playing with the calculator.)

===

Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
nai...@justforeignpolicy.org
(202) 448-2898 x1
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