The Big Winners In Stimulus Compromise: The Upper-Middle Class

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February 11, 2009 07:19 PM

When President Obama outlined on January 8 the rationale for the economic stimulus bill, "The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act," he clearly identified the men and women most in trouble:

Nearly two million jobs have now been lost, and on Friday we are likely to learn that we lost more jobs last year than at any time since World War II. Just in the past year, another 2.8 million Americans who want and need full-time work have had to settle for part-time jobs.

The House-Senate compromise, however, cuts funds for extended health care coverage for the unemployed; cuts $30 billion in aid to state governments to prevent reductions in social services to the poor and out-of-work; and also cuts a special "Making Work Pay" tax holiday from $500 to $400 for an individual, and from $1,000 to $800 for a couple, for low-to-middle-income workers still hanging on to their jobs

Amid all the cutting, however, one group emerged unscathed: the upper-middle class, the not-quite-super-rich, but certainly not on the ropes. Most of these folks, in terms of income and employment, are what could be called the un-needy, a group clearly distinct from those Obama identified as the core target of the legislation. The "compromise" legislation includes $70 billion, or just under 10 percent of the whole package, to be used expressly to take care of these affluent people.

In fact, these lucky men and women make so much money that they fall into the ever-expanding grasp of the alternative minimum tax (AMT). The AMT was originally designed in 1969 to prevent the nation's millionaires and billionaires from using tax loopholes to pay zero income tax. That year, 155 very wealthy taxpayers paid no federal tax whatsoever. This year, if the law remains as it is currently crafted, the AMT would, through bracket creep, apply to as many as 25 million taxpayers, including those making in the $85,000 to $250,000 range, depending on how many deductions they claim (the more deductions, the more likely the AMT comes into play).

There is a strong case to be made that the AMT was never intended to apply to people in these income categories - for example two public school teachers married to each other -- and Congress in recent years has repeatedly passed temporary one-year "patches" postponing the downward reach of the tax provision.

Some economists argue, however, that patching the AMT is one of the least effective ways for Congress to stimulate the economy and create jobs. As the Huffington Post has reported, the Congressional Budget Office and Brookings-Urban Institute Tax Policy Center have both described the AMT as a poor use of federal dollars.

Why then has Congress added the $70 billion AMT patch to the bill, while cutting other expenditures right and left?

The most obvious answers are 1) the people who make $80,000 to $250,000 are influential and vocal in pressing their complaints to Congress; 2) an AMT-induced tax hike would produce an outcry; 3) and people in this class have become the most contested "swing" voters in elections -- running the gamut from presidential to state legislative elections.

Once these upper-middle-class voters were a reliably Republican constituency, but over the past generation, Democrats have made major inroads, evinced in the success of Bill Clinton, Al Gore, John Kerry and Barack Obama in the well-to-do suburbs of New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and along the entire California coast.

A major consequence is that leaders of both parties are vying intensely for this crucial segment of the electorate -- Republicans to staunch the hemorrhaging, Democrats to speed it up. Thus, the $70 billion AMT patch has become inviolable.

Below are tables illustrating the distributional impact of the AMT patch as calculated by the Brookings-Urban Institute Tax Policy Center:

When President Obama outlined on January 8 the rationale for the economic stimulus bill, "The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act," he clearly identified the men and women most in trouble: Nearl...
When President Obama outlined on January 8 the rationale for the economic stimulus bill, "The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act," he clearly identified the men and women most in trouble: Nearl...
 
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Tom Edsall's argument on the AMT is premised on a false dichotomy, imposed by three so-called "GOP moderates" in the Senate: Either you patch the AMT or you help lower-income taxpayers and folks still worse off than they are. In fact, we should be doing both, although I will concede that the AMT patch could have and probably should have (and would have) been taken care of in subsequent legislation. But it's wrong to suggest that the AMT tax "break" is inequitable.

The AMT was originally imposed to insure that super-wealthy individuals who had previously managed to avoid paying all income taxes paid something. But because it was never indexed to inflation, unpatched, it imposes a surcharge on people who are already paying substantial income taxes, and I believe that this is unfair.

I am a case in point. For 2008, my wife and I are already paying nearly $18,000 in federal income taxes. (We would be paying more, except for itemized deductions which include more than $15,000 in charitable giving.) Without the AMT patch that Congress approved last year, we would have to pay an additional $3,000 or so in AMT, on top of our regular $18,000 tax bill. How does this promote tax equity? It doesn't. The AMT should be permanently indexed so that it's paid by those it was originally intended for -- not the "upper middle class" that, unpatched, it now milks for additional revenue.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 PM on 02/12/2009
- rf-hawaii I'm a Fan of rf-hawaii 27 fans permalink

Looks like the Republicans are in charge again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 02/12/2009
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I don't think the AMT was intended to apply to people making $85,000. And I don' t think upper-middle people are the ones who've been molly-coddled by the Beltway. Millionaires and billionaires are the ones Washington has taken care of and continues to take care of. Compare the reduction in federal taxes middle class people received under Bu$hCo tax cuts with the reduction millionaires and billionaires got. Federal policy has been creating a third-world-style elite in this country. And we have the third-world style debt load to prove it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 PM on 02/12/2009
- DosGatos2 I'm a Fan of DosGatos2 25 fans permalink

You are focusing too much on the dollars and not enough on the demographic. College degree or not, those who earn these incomes do so because they are skilled and smart. Smart enough to know that they have been pushed down the economic ladder by neoconservatism and that they are not better off because 25 C-suiters have multimillion dollar comp packages while they watch their health benefits eroding, pensions gone, and their jobs outsourced. As the article says, the UMC are swing voters. Therefore it is important for both parties to take care of them, or at least appear to take care of them.

Furthermore, the UCM was not the demographic AMT was intended for. Patching AMT was the right thing to do, but what's really needed is a permanent fix.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 02/12/2009

Didn't Obama PROMISE $1K tax cut to WORKING CLASS familes?! What's the deal with the $800 tax cut and it will only be visible by an extra $13 per pay?!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 02/12/2009
- olephart I'm a Fan of olephart 113 fans permalink

That 13 bucks is in monopoly money. With the trillion dollar deficit and the trillion dollar bailout that George left they've run out of real money and we'll have to make do with the Christmas leftovers from Parker Brothers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:47 PM on 02/12/2009
- olephart I'm a Fan of olephart 113 fans permalink

It is true that the AMT was not designed to affect the non wealthy. However, in the interim, many so called middle class tax breaks have been initiated and others have become what are nothing less than subsidies for certain taxpayers. I read of one case where the taxpayer was hit by the AMT. Although the income was good it was not stratospheric. He did have 11 dependent children, his wife as well as himself plus the usual itemized deductions. That's an $11,000 tax credit plus about $60,000 in exemptions and deductions. So if you listen closely you'll hear the sound of the world's smallest violin.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 02/12/2009
- Sumocat I'm a Fan of Sumocat 34 fans permalink

$85k is upper middle class? Maybe in Kansas. But where my wife and I live, that's below the median, which we just reached this year. Here I thought that made us just middle middle class, but apparently we're "not-quite-super-rich." Woo-hoo!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 PM on 02/12/2009
- MNCurler I'm a Fan of MNCurler 6 fans permalink

Now you've learned the secret of the Democrats when they promise tax breaks to "working Americans" Their version of a middle class working American is someone who works on an assembly line making $30k a year. Everyone above that they consider upper income and want to impose more taxes. That's how they keep their tax base healthy and give the illusion they are helping the middle class. If you were to get a tax break they would claim this is a tax break for the rich.

Be careful.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 PM on 02/12/2009
- mjtaylor22 I'm a Fan of mjtaylor22 45 fans permalink
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ok great, LET'S DO THIS THE jOHN mCCAIN WAY, THE FUNDAMENTALS ARE STRONG SO NO STIMULUS IS NEEDED AT ALL. WAITE THE WHOEL DARN rnc VOTED AGAINST THIS sTIMULUS, FINE , NO TAX BREAKS FOR ANYONE UNDER A MILLION, THAT IS HOW THE rnc WOULD DO IT.
STOP WHINING

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 PM on 02/12/2009
- camper320 I'm a Fan of camper320 5 fans permalink

We make 250K year and we're still not rich by any means. I make tuna noodle casseroles and shop at marshalls. We just bought a house in the suburbs of NYC and our mortage and basics like heating and insurance add up to about $10K/month, and we don't even have kids yet! About half of our salary goes to taxes. We both come from lower middle class backgrounds, we actually pay for healthcare for my husband's parents and are making regular payments to my sister's family because she has a deadbeat husband and two small children and if we didn't help them they wouldn't have money to heat their house or buy food.
I voted for Obama knowing we might have to pay more but I know that we're all in this together and if the middle class goes under our country will be in real trouble, and I believe all people have the potential to succeed if they have access to opportunities.

I feel like the real problem in our economy is the transfer of wealth from the middle class to the upper 1% of the rich, who filter their income thru the caymen islands (it's a huge problem) and defer their taxes until they die--these billionaires pay nothing and they are driving our economy into the ground.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 PM on 02/12/2009
- hotseat I'm a Fan of hotseat 27 fans permalink
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I'm with you. It's all about the top 1%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 PM on 02/12/2009
- MNCurler I'm a Fan of MNCurler 6 fans permalink

Good thing you're ready to hand over more of your money because the Dems are coming after it. Don't blame anybody but yourself because that's how you voted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 02/12/2009
- camper320 I'm a Fan of camper320 5 fans permalink

I voted for Obama with the awareness that my taxes might go up. I am proud to have a president who understands and follows our constitution, and who cares about people and cares about upward mobility. The alternative was unthinkable. More years of rethuglican anti-envionment, anti-middle class, anti-education? Republicans have driven our economy into the ground for the past 8 years. It was unthinkable to vote for McCain with his violent temper and self righteousness a la bush, and Palin. Palin was simply ridiculous.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:55 PM on 02/12/2009
- rf-hawaii I'm a Fan of rf-hawaii 27 fans permalink

There is plenty to go around if hoarding is controlled a little.

Republicans don't seem to believe this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 02/12/2009
- hemnebob I'm a Fan of hemnebob 2 fans permalink

what a disappointment.
here we have all been sitting on the edge of our seats to see
what if anything can be done for the rest of us and what happens?
this really sucks.
makes me think that although my candidate won, the class system
will continue to push us further down the ladder once again.
mr. president...
your constituents are not going to be happy with you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 02/12/2009
- rasit I'm a Fan of rasit 9 fans permalink

With all due respect, the author's implication that this bill was "Somehow" crafted to attract the "swing" sounds very superficial, at best.....

The House bill with a price tag of $819 billion had, enough to please most of the people; but, then the Senate version added more, mostly due to the $15,000 homebuyer credit, and other Republican amendments, boosted the price tag to close to $ 900 billion...

The final House-Senate compromise, was "just that"....Most everybody got "some of what they wanted". and the final make up had everything to do with the "passability" of the bill than "favoring a particular group".....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:21 PM on 02/12/2009

The AMT (in its current form) has outlived its usefulness.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 PM on 02/12/2009

Harry Reid has to go. He is a wimp. He is all about compromise and giving in to the Republicans. And, I think it is sickening that our new president put a Republican who wants to get rid of Social Security as Commerce Secretary. The Republicans dominated the debate on this Stimulus plan and I honestly do not get it. The Democrats should have made the Republicans filibuster and make fools out of themselves, which they are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 PM on 02/12/2009
- fcsakes I'm a Fan of fcsakes 92 fans permalink
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Sucks big time. I would like to think karma will take care of these people who like to kick us around, but you know what? It won't. Done here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 PM on 02/12/2009
- LauraD I'm a Fan of LauraD 58 fans permalink

Okay, people, time for a reality check:

The average income in the US is $$50,233 per household (as of 2007).

You living in an area where the average income or the cost of living is much higher than the average is not the problem of the federal government. They have to take the national averages to make this stuff work because they are doing things on a national level, and you all are complaining about things that are entirely local.

At the same time, you don't seem to realize that these super-expensive places are also where most of the population lives. 80% of the country lives in cities and coastal areas, traditionally far more expensive to live than other places, and the average is STILL only $50,233 per household. You're just going to have to either get used to it, or move somewhere that hits closer to the national average. Sorry.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 PM on 02/12/2009
- JonShank I'm a Fan of JonShank 46 fans permalink
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OR... the Federal Government can stop wasting our hard-earned tax money and GIVE IT BACK TO US!!!! Of course that is anathema to congressional thinking, especially for the current pack of dems. They actually have sold people on the idea that tax cuts don't work. The have people believing that giving the people who need it the most and who will in fact spend it, their OWN MONEY, just won't work. Instead, they tell people, what we need to do is hand out more in medicaid and infrastructure jobs, THAT will make all the difference. UNBELIEVABLE.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 02/12/2009
- LauraD I'm a Fan of LauraD 58 fans permalink

Hmm.

OR - you could read what I wrote.

What I was calling people out on was the claim that that income range was not upper middle class or even middle class, and according to the only metric the feds have, it very clearly is.

What I DIDN'T do was give an opinion on this plan. I haven't looked hard enough at it yet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:18 PM on 02/12/2009
- RobBob I'm a Fan of RobBob 7 fans permalink
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This country needs the improvements in infrastructure. "Giving you back" your tax money isn't going to get any of that stuff done.

Poor folks shouldn't have to decide whether to pay their light bill or to buy their medications. "Giving you back" your tax money isn't going to help them either.

I don't have to be sold on the notion that tax cuts alone don't work: it's self-evident. We've tried that and it has not worked. It has, in fact, brought us to the precarious position we're now in. The time for "I got mine, good luck to you" is past.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 02/12/2009
- mortrefuge I'm a Fan of mortrefuge 12 fans permalink

Please recall that we are already at the end of a radical period of tax cuts including the inheritance tax going to zero this year. If tax cuts had the power to make our economy better it would already have done so. Instead we have the worst economic and credit crisis since the Great Depression. A global financial crisis that is not going away and cities and states bleeding red ink. All of the traditional forms of ammunition have been exhausted. Can't cut interest rates (they are at zero). Can't cut taxes much more than they've already been cut in the last eight years (millions already out of work or make too little to pay taxes).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 PM on 02/12/2009
- LauraD I'm a Fan of LauraD 58 fans permalink

Sorry, that's actually the median income, not the average income. The average income is lower, $46,996.

Hmm.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 PM on 02/12/2009
- RobBob I'm a Fan of RobBob 7 fans permalink
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Your numbers clearly are not correct. It's almost mathematically impossible for the average income to be less than the median income when you have people earning 20 times or more the median. The last I saw, the median household income was closer to $38,000.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 PM on 02/12/2009
- AnneOlivia I'm a Fan of AnneOlivia 4 fans permalink
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Thank you for putting this so well. It's so hard for me to understand how people cannot get by on $85,000+ a year, when I manage somehow on $30,000 for me and my son. I think we all need to try harder to live within our means, and take an honest look at the choices we're making.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 PM on 02/12/2009
- Dewtrell I'm a Fan of Dewtrell 8 fans permalink

Huh... this must have been written by an out of touch liberal (and I voted for President Obama BTW)! However, there are out of touch libs and conservatives... conservatives think if you're earning $5 million a year, you're middle class, and libs think if you're making $85K you're upper middle class.

As a native Los Angeleno, my fiance and I make more than $85K combined, we're in our mid 30s, make between $120-130K combined. We own both of our cars outright, but I've had my car for 12 years! We don't own a home but live in a decent area but rent is $1400 a month, we don't have no debt at all but we do vacation every year. Our life is decent, we are middle class, maybe just a notch up but it's just us. Imagine throwing in a mortgage and kids?

Those of us who make these kinds of salaries also live in the most expensive cities in the U.S., so it's all relative. However, even if one is living in a less expensive area of the country, making $85K for a FAMILY is NOT upper middle class - it is middle class and this relief helps people like us, a large sector of this country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:01 PM on 02/12/2009
- JonShank I'm a Fan of JonShank 46 fans permalink
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Well if you talk to the Dems in Congress they will tell you that tax cuts aren't the answer. In other words, giving people, like you and your fiancee, your hard-earned money back won't stimulate the economy. Not like giving it to medicaid, and state governments!!! Oh yeah, that'll do the trick. You deserve more of your money! End of story.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:05 PM on 02/12/2009
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You're mentioning half truths.

Republicans want tax cuts - but ONLY FOR the extremely wealthy and for business (the idea being, they can have more money for jobs.) The fact of the matter is, business does NOT create more jobs just because they have tax cuts. They generally tend to pocket that money for cushion. (Which is a prudent business move.)

So, saying that the dems are saying tax cuts aren't the answer is only half the story. They're saying that tax cuts FOR THE WEALTHY AND BIG BUSINESS is not the answer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 PM on 02/12/2009
- gotborked I'm a Fan of gotborked 43 fans permalink

No kidding. Also, there's a huge gap between $85k and $250k.

And you're right. Even the people who are making the high end of that make certain sacrifices, and have certain expenses that keep them well away from an "upper-middle class" lifestyle. Chances are, someone making $100k is also paying off the student loans they had to borrow to be able to get a job that pays that much. Families making $200k often do so, because both parents are working, etc. etc.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:19 PM on 02/12/2009
- ynp7 I'm a Fan of ynp7 2 fans permalink

But $85k/year is upper middle class if you're single, and I think that's what people are thinking. Anyone who's going to make the argument that a family can't live on a single income of $85k needs to wake up and realize that you don't have a right to a single income household, just as you shouldn't have kids if you can't afford them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:23 PM on 02/12/2009
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That is only if that person has made that much money on a sustained continual basis.

Last year I "made" $80k. But that was ONLY one year. I have been trying to recover from the LAST recession in 2001 paying off debt and student loans. I also live in one of the more expensive areas of the country which is becoming INCREASINGLY MORE expensive because people think Texas is a cheap place to live and are moving here. Prior to that, I was making less than 1/2 of the country's average.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:30 PM on 02/12/2009
- Dewtrell I'm a Fan of Dewtrell 8 fans permalink

But we're not talking about single people... and if we were, $85K in Los Angeles, San Francisco, NYC or Boston is still not upper middle class, not even close.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 PM on 02/12/2009
- iblogleft I'm a Fan of iblogleft 88 fans permalink
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So you are saying that it was OK that mom's or dads had to start working and create a dual-income household in order to pay giant profit margins? It was OK to look for immediate returns in dollars, in exchange for the decimation of everything we cherish.

Typical ROI ignorance. You measure return on investment in dollars, completely ignoring the fact that the destruction of the family unit has been, and will continue to be disastrous for our society. In the end, even the dollar return on investment will be lower, because we have destroyed the foundation of civilization in the name of growing GDP.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 02/12/2009
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Amen Dewtrell! I am right there in the same boat. There are a lot of us who have busted our ba11s to make a decent living, but still live in apartments and rent because it's that expensive to live nowadays. This notion that someone making 125K a year is some Monopoly guy sitting around their mansion laughing at the poor is insane and ignorant. BTW, I donated to, and volunteered for Obama. So, no I'm not a fake liberal posting here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 02/12/2009
- mmmd I'm a Fan of mmmd 8 fans permalink

I would like to echo Dewtrell. Plus we have kids. Add to that, many people in their thirties who are making, say, $100K are also paying back their student loans. College tuition has gone up steadily during recent years, it's enough now to discourage people from persuing higher education.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 PM on 02/12/2009
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