Posted on 04/18/2018 9:25:19 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Yesterday, as most Americans are painfully aware, was Tax Day, the last day for filing individual income taxes this year. When the smoke clears, Americans will have paid $1.6 trillion in individual income taxes. And contrary to the populist rhetoric of both the Left and the Right, the vast majority of those taxes will have been paid by the rich. The wealthiest 1 percent of Americans, who earn 16 percent of U.S. income, will pay roughly 43 percent of federal income taxes this year.
Of course, income taxes are only one component of federal taxes, and for most Americans, its not even the biggest part of their taxes. All in, Americans will pay $3.3 trillion in federal taxes this year. On top of that, they will pay $1.8 trillion in local and state taxes, for a total burden (local, state, and federal) of $5.2 trillion, roughly 30 percent of GDP. Americans will pay more in taxes this year than they will for food, clothing, and shelter combined.
Despite record tax revenue, the federal government will still run an $800 billion budget deficit this year. Thats because it will spend roughly $4.1 trillion this year, while taking in the aforementioned $3.3 trillion. This is not rocket science: If you spend more than you take in, you have a problem. Progressives will blame low taxes generally, and the recent GOP tax reform in particular. But the Congressional Budget Office says that tax revenues as a percent of GDP will decline by just 0.7 percent this year. Spending, on the other hand, will increase by 3 percent of GDP, more than four times as much.
Over the long term, the tax cuts will probably mean larger deficits. CBO estimates that forgone tax revenue will add about $1.85 trillion to the debt over a decade. Not good. On the other hand, increased spending will add around $12 trillion to the debt over ten years. Spending is expected to grow by 70 percent, meaning that even without the tax cuts, we would be drowning in red ink. Houston, we have a spending problem.
Where does that spending go? Despite complaints from conservatives, domestic discretionary spending (everything from the FBI to the FDA, the Department of Commerce to the Department of Education) accounts for just 16 percent of federal spending. Traditional subjects of conservative ire, such as foreign aid, amount to less than 1 percent of spending. At the same time, despite criticism from liberals, and even after the increases that Congress just approved, defense spending will be just 15 percent of federal spending. Obviously, every dollar counts, and the $143 billion in increased domestic and defense spending that Congress just passed is not going to be helpful.
Still, the big driver of federal spending remains entitlements, specifically Social Security (24 percent of federal spending), Medicare (17 percent), and Medicaid (9 percent). Thats half of all federal spending for just three programs. And the cost of all three programs is accelerating. A combination of an aging population and rising health-care costs means that Medicare is expected to grow by as much as 7 percent per year, while Medicaid increases at a rate of 5.5 percent annually. Meanwhile, Social Security is expected to increase from 4.9 percent of GDP to 6 percent within a decade. The long-term unfunded liabilities of these programs approach $80 trillion or more.
Quite simply, there is no way to balance the budget or seriously reduce spending without reforming these programs. Yet entitlements remain off-limits on a bipartisan basis.
Congresss answer to all this was to rush to the floor last week with a Balanced Budget Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Predictably, the measure failed, but it did highlight the hypocrisy of a Congress that seems to embody St. Augustines prayer, Oh Lord, make me chaste but not yet.
In the aftermath of Tax Day, millions of Americans are having to tighten their belts and realizing that they now have less money than they had before the government took its bite. Wouldnt it be nice, though, if Congress did a little more belt-tightening, and the American people had to do a little less?
p
(don’t try to save money through stopping fraud and abuse and funds to illegal immigrants, oh no...)
Nothing changes till the money runs out.
Repeat LOUD and OFTEN..................
And with an aging population and smaller working age people it will only get worse.
In the United States specifically, it is expected that the Social Security trust fund will run out by 2034. At that point, there will only be enough revenue coming in to pay out approximately 77% of benefits.
The Pension Time Bomb, $400 Trillion by 2050.
Link: http://www.visualcapitalist.com/pension-time-bomb-400-trillion-2050/
Stop giving checks to foreigners who never paid into the system.
Well. Duh.
Or anybody else who didn’t pay into the system.
Oh, no!
We’re not going to balance the budget on the backs of the poor!
/sarc
The very concept of “entitlements” is evil.
> “Taxes Dont Cover Americas Expenses: Entitlement reform the only solution to ballooning debt.”
I disagree.
Working people paid taxes into those entitlement funds.
Democrats and some Republicans MISMANAGED the trust funds egregiously, even criminally.
Where did the corrupt crats in Congress ever get the idea they could buy votes using the trust fund?
They ‘borrow’ against the trust funds and dump the proceeds into the general fund. Then they proceed to buy votes.
Michael Tanner is a moron for not calling this out. But then the outfit he writes for is a NeverTrump cluster of a-holes.
The Fed is the broker for this asininity. The President should tell the Fed to shove it, delete the debt that was wrongfully created and then loaned to the criminals in Congress. Then place the Trust Fund into management by several independent money managers and actuarial firms who agree to faithfully and legally manage the wealth under penalty of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
[[Taxes Dont Cover Americas Expenses]]
That is why they are going for climate change ‘carbon taxes’
At my local SS office, it is full of Indians (dot, not feather) who brought their parents over to get on SS.
Doesn’t matter who is in office the spending continues to increase exponentially and will keep doing so until the bottom falls out.
More stuck on stupid.
"Entitlement reform the only solution to ballooning debt."
FR: Never Accept the Premise of Your Opponents Argument
The congressional record shows that Rep. John Bingham, a constitutional lawmaker, had clarified that the Founding States had left the care of the people uniquely to the states, not the feds.
... the care of the property, the liberty, and the life of the citizen, under the solemn sanction of an oath imposed by your Federal Constitution, is in the States, and not in the Federal Government [emphases added]. Rep. John Bingham, Congressional Globe, 1866. (See about middle of 3rd column.)
In other words, so-called federal entitlements are based on state powers and uniquely associated state revenues that the corrupt, post-17th Amendment ratification Congress has been stealing from the states for the last 100+ years, particularly since the time of the state sovereignty-ignoring FDR Administration.
"Congress is not empowered to tax for those purposes which are within the exclusive province of the States."Justice John Marshall, Gibbons v. Ogden, 1824.
"The smart crooks long ago figured out that getting themselves elected to federal office to make unconstitutional tax laws to fill their pockets is a much easier way to make a living than robbing banks." me
"Federal career lawmakers probably laugh all the way to the bank to deposit bribes for putting loopholes for the rich and corporations in tax appropriations laws, Congress actually not having the express constitutional authority to make most appropriations laws where domestic policy is concerned. Such laws are based on stolen state powers and uniquely associated stolen state revenues." me
Patriots need to put the republic back on its constitutional foundations by putting a stop to unconstitutional federal taxes by repealing the 16th and 17th Amendments.
17th Amendment had nothing to do w income taxes. But I agree to repealing per original Constitution.
17th Amendment
Proposed 1912;Ratified 1913
1. The Senate of the United States shall be composed of two Senators from each State, elected by the people thereof, for six years; and each Senator shall have one vote. The electors in each State shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the State legislatures.
I respectfully disagree.
One of the reasons that the Founding States established the Senate was so that the Senate could protect the states from the feds by killing unconstitutional House appropriations bills, bills that not only steal state powers, but also steal state revenues uniquely associated with those powers.
This is evidenced by the following clarifications of the feds constitutionally limited powers by previous generations of state sovereignty-respecting Supreme Court justices.
Congress is not empowered to tax for those purposes which are within the exclusive province of the States. Justice John Marshall, Gibbons v. Ogden, 1824.
From the accepted doctrine that the United States is a government of delegated powers, it follows that those not expressly granted, or reasonably to be implied from such as are conferred, are reserved to the states, or to the people. To forestall any suggestion to the contrary, the Tenth Amendment was adopted. The same proposition, otherwise stated, is that powers not granted are prohibited [emphasis added]. United States v. Butler, 1936.
But federal lawmakers now regularly use the 17th Amendment to exploit low-information voters. Career lawmakers do this by promising such voters every entitlement program under the sun in order to get elected and reelected.
The problem is that low-information voters evidently do not understand that the states have never expressly constitutionally delegated to the feds the specific power to establish entitlement programs. This gets us back to Binghams clarification that the Founding States uniquely trusted the care of the people to the states, not the feds.
... the care of the property, the liberty, and the life of the citizen, under the solemn sanction of an oath imposed by your Federal Constitution, is in the States, and not in the Federal Government [emphases added]. Rep. John Bingham, Congressional Globe, 1866. (See about middle of 3rd column.)
In other words, misguided ordinary voters unthinkingly use their 17th Amendment voting power to elect corrupt senators who approve unconstitutional taxes, arguably stolen state revenues, that the feds collect through the 16th Amendment to establish and run unconstitutional entitlement programs.
This is why patriots need to work with their state lawmakers to support Pres. Trump in leading the states to repeal the 16th and 17th Amendments so that Trump's vision for MAGA lasts for many generations.
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