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Published byJodie Edwina Manning Modified over 9 years ago
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Ch. 14: Taxes and Government Spending
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Section 1: What Are Taxes? “Nothing in life is certain but death and taxes.” - Benjamin Franklin
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Taxes/Revenue A tax is a required payment to the local, state, or national government. Income raised by the government from taxes is called revenue.
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Taxes and the Constitution The Constitution grants that Congress may tax: “To lay and collect taxes, duties, imposts and excises, to pay the debts, and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States.”
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Types of Collection: Income Tax Individual income tax: tax on a person’s annual earnings.
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Types of Collection: Sales Tax Sales tax is a tax on the dollar value of a good or service being purchased.
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Types of Collection: Property Tax Property tax is a tax on the value of a property.
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Types of Collection: Corporate Income Tax Corporate income tax is a tax on the earnings of corporations.
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Types of Collection: Capital Gains Long-Term Capital Gains Taxes are paid on earnings from investments held for more than 1 year (less than 1 year is taxed as income tax).
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Tax Structures: Proportional Tax A proportional tax is when the tax rate percentage is the same for all income levels. JoeTony Income$150,000$50,000 Tax percent rate10% Tax payment$15,000$5,000
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Tax Structures: Progressive Tax A progressive tax is when the tax percentage rate increases as income increases. JoeTony Income$150,000$50,000 Tax percent rate25%10% Tax payment$37,500$5,000
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Tax Structures: Regressive Tax A regressive tax is when the tax percentage rate decreases as income increases. Does this ever happen? Examples?
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Tax Structures: Regressive Tax A regressive tax is when the tax percentage rate decreases as income increases. Does this ever happen? Examples? JoeTony Income$150,000$50,000 Cost of new car$10,000 Sales tax percent6% Sales tax$600 Tax as % of income.006%.012%
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Tax Web Types of Collection: Income Tax Sales Tax Property Tax Capital Gains Tax Estate (Inheritance) Tax Recipient: Federal Social Security State Local Spent On:
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Section 2: Federal Taxes The Federal Government is the branch that receives the most taxes.
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Tax Withholding Employers withhold money from employees paychecks throughout the year and send it to the government. Estimated amount of taxes owed.
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Tax Return At the end of the year, the amount withheld might have been too much or too little. Tax payers must file a tax form which either returns or pays money.
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Personal Exemptions Tax exemptions are amounts of money that you don’t need to pay taxes on. Examples: – Charitable donations – Interest on loan – Business expenses/investment – Medical expenses
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Gross Income vs. Taxable Income Gross income is the total amount of money earned. Taxable income is after tax deductions have been taken out. – Taxable Income = Gross Income – Deductions
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Practice Problem: You make $30,000/year, your spouse makes $40,000 You gave $5,000 away this year You paid $4,000 in interest for loans Your tax rate is 15% – How much do you end up with?
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Tax Incentives The tax system incentivizes certain behavior You pay less if you… – Marry – Have children – Donate money – Invest in a home You pay more if you… – Purchase a second (vacation) property – Smoke or gamble – Live lavishly
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Section 3: Federal Spending The Federal Budget goes primarily to the Military, Medicare/Medicaid, and Social Security.
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Federal Spending Graph
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Mandatory vs. Discretionary Spending Mandatory Spending: Spending required by current legislation – Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid Discretionary Spending: Spending that is optional (not required) – Military, Transportation, Agriculture
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Discretionary “Other” Spending Dept. of Education Dept. of Agriculture Dept. of Energy Corps of Engineers Dept. of Labor Dept. of Health Services Dept. of Energy EPA
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Debt/Deficit Spending outpaces Revenue
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Section 4: State and Local Spending State and Local governments spend money on infrastructure (roads) and education.
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State Budgets State revenue comes from… – State income tax – Sales tax – Excise tax (Sin tax) State money is spent on… – Education – Roads/infrastructure – Public welfare
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Pennsylvania State Budget
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Local Budgets Local budgets receive most of their money through… – Property taxes Local government spends most of their money on… – Education (Local area school district)
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Local Budgets/Education If funding for schools is local, what effect does that have on public school systems?
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Tax Web Types of Collection: Income Tax Sales Tax Property Tax Capital Gains Tax Estate (Inheritance) Tax Recipient: Federal Social Security State Local Spent On: Social Security Medicare/Medicaid Education Military/National Defense Roads/Infrastructure
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