G OVERNMENT IN THE E CONOMY. R EASONS TO A LLOW G OVERNMENT I NTERVENTION : Establish and enforce private property rights and the law Ensure market competition.

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Presentation transcript:

G OVERNMENT IN THE E CONOMY

R EASONS TO A LLOW G OVERNMENT I NTERVENTION : Establish and enforce private property rights and the law Ensure market competition Protect consumers Stabilize the economy Promote economic security: i.e. social security, food stamps, unemployment Provide public goods/services – national defense

H OW D O W E P AY F OR T HESE I NTERVENTIONS ? Taxes : Required payment to a local, state, or national government Primary way governments raise money they need to operate Called revenue : Income received by a government from taxes and non-tax sources “Taxes are the price of civilization.” Oliver Wendell Holmes

W HY THE G OVERNMENT C OLLECTS T AXES Pay for the cost of government Protect selected industries (tariffs) Discourage activities (“sin taxes”) Encourage certain activities (tax breaks) Tax policy as economic stabilizer

F EDERAL T AXES : WHAT TAXES PROVIDE A MAJORITY OF REVENUE ? ( PERCENTAGES CHANGE ) 55% - Income and Corporate Taxes (11%) 31% - Payroll Taxes (FICA, Medicare).8% - Excise Taxes: specific items (perfume, liquor) 2.2% - Misc: Estate and gift taxes, customs duties Total revenues 2012 – $2.5 Trillion

I DAHO S TATE T AXES : T OTAL R EVENUE (P ERCENTAGES C HANGE ) 33% Property Taxes (Homes & Vehicles) 28% Sales Tax (Consumption Tax) 28% Individual Income Taxes (4% Corporate) 6% Fuel Tax 5% Various taxes that you may or may not pay throughout your lifetime! There are also Local Taxes/Municipal taxes that cover property, sales, water, sewer, school, etc.

T WO P RINCIPLES T AXES A RE B ASED O N Benefits Received Tax people in proportion to the benefits they receive from a government service Toll bridge Fees for public golf courses Campgrounds “Sin Taxes” Gas taxes towards road construction (hypothetically) Those that use it should pay for it, those that don’t use, don’t pay San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge - Toll

P RINCIPLES T AXES A RE B ASED O N Ability to Pay Promotes the idea that the rich can afford to pay taxes the poor cannot afford to pay The wealthier you are, the greater your ability to pay the tax Federal and State Income Taxes were supposed to be designed this way.

T AX S TRUCTURES Proportional – “Flat Tax” A tax for which the percentage of income paid in taxes remains the same for all income levels $350,000 X 10% = $35,000 tax $50,000 X 10% = $5,000 tax

T AX S TRUCTURES Progressive tax A tax for which the percentage of income paid increases as income increases People with very small income might not pay any tax at all $100,000 X 35% = $35,000 tax $25,000 X 20% = $5,000 tax $5,000 = 0% tax

T AX S TRUCTURES Regressive Tax A tax for which the percentage of income paid in taxes decreases as income increases Sales tax – a low income earner pays the same amount as a high income earner on a refrigerator, but pays a higher percentage of their income. FICA/Medicare – only pay up to $110,100 (2012) of your income, so millionaires pay the same as a $400,000 wage earner. Up to $113,700 (2013) Income Tax – 25% of income earners pay 85% of the income taxes

W HO P AYS THE M OST T AX IN THE U NITED S TATES ? Income groupIncome split point Group’s share of total U.S. income Group’s share of federal income taxes Top 1%Above $364, %33.71% Top 5%Above $145, %53.80% Top 10%Above $103, %65.73% Top 25%Above $62, %83.90% Top 50%Above $30, %96.50% Bottom 50%Below $30, %3.5%

P AYROLL T AXES “Pay-as-you-earn” system throughout the year, mostly by employers withholding Withholding taxes FICA/Medicare – 7.65% Federal Income Taxes State Income Taxes

T YPES OF G OVERNMENT S PENDING Mandatory – money lawmakers are required by law to spend on certain programs or to use for interest payments on the national debt Most mandatory is for entitlement programs: benefits paid to people who meet certain requirements or income Example: Social Security, Medicare, VA benefits Discretionary – government planners can choose to spend (1/4 of budget) Example: education, defense spending, foreign aid