Harvard Tells the Truth on Taxes
Harvard University’s motto, Veritas, is Latin for ‘truth’. Harvard’s Alumni
magazine (Jan-Feb 2006) featured an article, “The Middle Class on the
Precipice” which revealed an important truth. The problem with the home
economics of Middle America is taxes. Taxes are why the average family –
even with two parents working outside the home - has less left over at the
end of the month than 30 years ago – when the average family had one wage
earner. Families have less because taxes take away more.
The article compares the average American family in the 1970s to 2004.
The same average family makes more money but has less to spend freely at the
end of the month. In fact the average family, 50th percentile – median, has
$800 less a year ($66.67 @ month less).
The average family, two parents and two kids, in the 1970s made
$41,670.00 – adjusted for inflation to today’s dollars. There was one wage
earner in the family. The average family, two parents and two kids, in 2004
made $73,770.00 in current dollars. So, where did the money go?
The per cent of money spent on food, clothing, and major appliances went
down. The cost of entertainment (including computers), housing and health
insurance went up. Others washed out, like more on pets and less on tobacco.
But the loss of money for personal choices, economic freedom, wasn’t this
losing balance sheet. It was taxes.
Harvard Magazine blithely commented that the rate of taxation, from all
sources, increased from 24% to only 30%. Stop. Do the math. Here’s the truth
Harvard revealed even though they didn’t revile in it. If the tax rate had
stayed at 24%, then the average family would have $4426.20 more of their own
money. They earned more, but kept less because of government greed.
Let’s see it again. 24% of $73,770.00 is $17,824.80. 30% of $73,770.00 is
$22,131.00. That’s $4426.20 lost to taxes – for the same income. That’s
$368.85 a month the average family is spending on permanent, reliable,
sustainable revenues, ‘investments’, for vital infrastructure and public
services. Uh-huh. Bull. Ask the family of firefighter married to a teacher
with two kids what an extra $368.85 a month means to them.
The average family’s taxes didn’t increase to pay the salaries of the
teachers and firefighters on the government payroll. Those meager increases
were covered and surpassed by inflation. The growth of local, state and
federal governments exceeds inflation.
The additional money the family spent on cars, insurance, dry cleaning,
etc. is a function of two parents working outside of the home. The Mom and
Dad feel like they both have to work just to keep up. Not to get ahead of
their parents. Just to keep up. Yet, they are both working to support
government.
Suppose only one person worked. Say the average real wage hadn’t
increased a penny, so the income for a family of four is $41, 670.00 in the
70s and now. If the average tax rate is 24%, then the family paid $10,000.80
in taxes. The same family, same wage, pays $12,501.00 when the taxes are an
average of 30%. The difference is $2,500.20 or $208.35 @ month. Two hundred
dollars more money at the end of the month for a family earning under four
thousand a month is a lot of money. It means a vacation for the family. It
means saving for college or retirement.
Yet, family needs count little against government greed. Are governments
doing so much more, better, in 2006 than in the 1970s to increase their
wealth on the backs of working families? What government services and
products make up the money lost to the average family? What government good
is so great that it’s worth this burden?
This price, the soaking of the average, let alone the so-called ‘rich’,
Americans is lost on the Big Government Republicans and Socialist Democrats.
President George Bush doesn’t get it either, or he would have vetoed the
budget busting, tax feeding programs from his two terms. To his, and other
Republicans’ credit, Bush supports Federal tax cuts. But, he hasn’t served
the American people rightly when he fails to serve them well with forcing
enough real spending cuts - beyond the bogus cuts in the rate of growth.
It’s even worse in my Virginia. In a Republican majority state
Republicans are the problem. So, Republicans may lose some elections in ‘06
and ‘07. So what? Republicans better fix the problem before ‘08.
James Atticus Bowden