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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- grf67 I'm a Fan of grf67 36 fans permalink

This is silly and stupid. At this point, there are no winners in the country. We have only losers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 02/12/2009

you should travel more ( as in outside the country) and you would see that youir worst day in America is better than an average day most other places. I am a winner and most Americans I knwo are also. Don't lump us in your "losing glass half empty" attitude. How quickly you have lost HOPE in the CHANGE you could believe in

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 AM on 02/12/2009
- The Lorax I'm a Fan of The Lorax 8 fans permalink

Well said.

By this scale I am middle (middle-lower?) class but even I know I have it better than many around the world and even many here in the US. I just keep going and try to make my own way through life without waiting for handouts for my kids and I.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 PM on 02/12/2009
- mikekopac I'm a Fan of mikekopac 5 fans permalink

"you worst day inAmerica is better than an average day in most other places"

where have you traveled

and I thought there were rich and poor all around the world

I imagine there are people worse off than me in Switzerland and better off than me in Afganistan

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 02/12/2009
- TrueThis I'm a Fan of TrueThis 31 fans permalink

I think this article is very opinionate and instigated some because we really won't know how this will affect the economy including various classes until it's in the system. But honestly I think Harry Reid needs to be replaces, he never consulted Pelosi before going in front of the media stating they all agree upon this stimulus package, maybe she would've asked for more than what the senators agreed upon.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 02/12/2009

A billion dollars sounds like a lot of money to Joe Six Pack, but it wouldn't even fund 3 months of public schools in Kansas, and that is only the state aid to the school districts. Local taxes provide the rest.

The plebes don't understand that it is the middle class that pays 90% of the income tax, that is why the Republicans got away with tax breaks for the other 10% for 20 years.

The problem is the financial and tax system in this country is way too complicated for the general public to understand, and that is why politicians manipulate it from the emotional instead of the rational.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 02/12/2009
- Hdaryl01 I'm a Fan of Hdaryl01 29 fans permalink
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Great post. Couldn't agree more!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:20 AM on 02/12/2009
- 4everdem I'm a Fan of 4everdem 3 fans permalink

Wow. I live and work in southern California. Combined my husband I fall into your "upper" middle class category. With the cost of living in Southern California (housing, taxes, etc) we are NOT privileged. We drive 10 year old cars and strugle to pay medical bills. Both of paid our own way through college. No one has ever given us anything. Last year because of AMT our effective tax rate was TRIPLE compared to the year before. If you just look at a persons income and not their local cost of living you are as ignorant as those who see all poor as lazy.

Get over it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 AM on 02/12/2009
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I can't even get angry or become outraged at this point because I don't expect any real help from my government and I they never fail to live up to those low expectations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 02/12/2009

Perhaps a household earning $85,000 a year might be may be willing to accept the title "rich" in relation to a global average income that is around $7,000 (Boston Globe 10.7.08) I do indeed consider the upper-middle class to be rich, but then again I consider myself to be rich (in spirit) making barely over 10k a year. In the Bay Area. How? Because the standard of living that we enjoy in America is a rare and temporary indulgence, one that I am grateful for, one that has provided me with unlimited opportunities and a world-class education, but I try to hold on to the things in life with real value that the bankers can't take away. Most of what drives the economy are non-essential luxury items that are sold to this upper-middle class tax bracket - you folks don't need money the same way that other people in the world need money. It's time to face the facts and admit that this tax cut is another grave error in the stimulus intended to hold up a standard of living that is no longer sustainable on this planet. Consumerism is on its way out or you are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 02/12/2009

I would say that this class is also the class that can afford to buy local, financially supports groups like MoveOn.org to work for better government and tries to work for a better environment. I live in an upper middle class community and over the past five years, I have seen more hybrid vehicles, busy farmers' markets and supporters (both volunteer and financial) of community service. Those issues are important too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:28 AM on 02/12/2009

Excellent point - the power is with the consumer to shift their spending away from wasteful products to sustainable ones. I bemoan the fact that I cannot always afford to buy local or organic.

I'm not actually pissed at the middle-class, I'm pissed at Americans who claim they are not "rich." Most of us are "rich" in a global and historic context.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 PM on 02/12/2009
- Tom Payned I'm a Fan of Tom Payned 73 fans permalink
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Bull puckey took out the caps on tarp recipients so again the riches one percent get the most, but this time it's "transparent", and worse at the price of the tax payer.

Change I can beleive in my arse. Same old Same Old. Thanks Dems your showing the R's that they are safe if they vote Dems, as there is no change for the rich.

Hiss Boo.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 AM on 02/12/2009
- jazzman I'm a Fan of jazzman 229 fans permalink
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The working poor have no advocates in the Congress. They are invisible and do not count to the Senators or Congresspeople who grace the halls of Congress. When the 'deal' is made it means that they are 'dealt' out of the equation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 AM on 02/12/2009

But the working poor barely pay taxes. What do you want from the da*n government?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 02/12/2009
- Suzanne525 I'm a Fan of Suzanne525 61 fans permalink
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Point is, the working poor are the first ones to lose their jobs. Tax cuts do not help them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 AM on 02/12/2009
- shanefish I'm a Fan of shanefish 10 fans permalink
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Pay to play...rea­l nice approach.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 02/12/2009

Excuse me, but they do pay taxes: like payroll and medicare taxes, and state taxesand sales taxes. And lower middle class wage earners like myself have to pay taxes on dividends on the small amounts invested in stocks and mutual funds! Taxes on dividends for people like myself who don't have much invested and don't make over $85K a year should be abolished! That's 15% tax I pay on dividends and any capital gains,;which is also added to my salary, and puts me in a higher tax bracket too! And the Repugs would like to think that people like me don't pay any taxes! And what about sales taxes? Talk about an unfair regressive tax! Millionaires pay the same sales taxes as a homeless person who buys a fifth at a liquor store.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 02/12/2009

How do you figure that, Razor? (perhaps I should contact you to do my tax return, and those of my sons) Even if a person who is considered working poor pays a small amount compared to what someone else has to pay, it's probably a lot to them. Do you remember the Bible story of the "widow's mite"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:19 AM on 02/12/2009
- Tom Payned I'm a Fan of Tom Payned 73 fans permalink
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The working poor pay a much higher percentage of taxes called the payroll tax and FICA. This was an issue discussed during the election.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 02/12/2009

ShakeYourC­omplacency­'s post below, says it best!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 AM on 02/12/2009

Let me join Steve Forbes and Jerry Brown for advocating a flat tax. You won't need the AMT.

Exempt the first 30K of wages (tag it to inflation). Eliminate as many deductions as possible. Figure out some sort of percentage that would be revenue neutral.

That would eliminate so much wasted time and money in just doing taxes.

I'd be willing to go with Milton Friedman for a negative income tax. (People below a certain point would receive money which would lessen as they make more money. Acts more like a safety net which doesn't discourage incentives to work.)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 AM on 02/12/2009
- spartanmom I'm a Fan of spartanmom 13 fans permalink

There is a philosophy behind the progressive tax.

Those who benefit most from the system have the greatest responsibility for maintaining it. So, they should pay more in taxes.

It needs to be simplified (see: Daschel, Geithner) but I think a flat tax is too much

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 02/12/2009
- hark I'm a Fan of hark 111 fans permalink

A flat tax simply shifts wealth to the rich. Why can't you people see that? Just look at how much they would save under the proposal. That's why they propose it.

Duh!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 AM on 02/12/2009

Just too much fairness I guess.

I think exempting the first portion of income would alleviate problems of the poor trying to scrape by.

It does let me people keep what they earn. But most importantly it takes a lot of costs out of the system. And I would be agreeable to raising that floor.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 PM on 02/12/2009
- indymaggie I'm a Fan of indymaggie 5 fans permalink

Sounds fair to me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 AM on 02/12/2009

That doesn't cut it: a progressive flat tax does for individuals and married couples: 45% on anyone making over $5 million a year, 40% on anyone making between $1 and 5 million, 35% on anyone making between $500k and $1K, 30% between $250k and $500k, 25% on $100k to $250k, 20% on $50k to 100k, and 15% on $25k to $50k, 10% on anything lower. NO DEDUCTIONS OR LOOPHOLES, AND MEDICARE FOR ALL! For businesses, allow for some reasonable deductions!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:20 AM on 02/12/2009
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Best stimulus- if banks borrow or are given money from the gov't, they MUST use at least 75% of it to make consumer loans available at interest rates no higher than 4%. That would allow people to consolidate debt, pay it off at reasonable rates, have money to save and put probably billions back into the economy. The banks would still make a profit and would be forced to operate more efficiently and have less to spend on obscene bonuses, stadium namings, and corporate jets.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 AM on 02/12/2009
- luciadulu I'm a Fan of luciadulu 11 fans permalink

Wow. My family's Upper Middle Class? I didn't realize that. My husband's in middle management and I work at a non-profit. I'm happy to hear that we're in that "safe" category, but it sure doesn't feel like it when lots of our friends in the same industries are being laid off. We just figure it's a matter of time for us, frankly.

I'd like to know how the income brackets break out to get this terminology. Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm betting there's a world of difference between how my family (in the 120's) spends money compared to the people making upwards of $1 million per year.

We don't mind paying our share, or even paying more taxes if they're spent on projects that benefit everyone. Schools, roads... we all use them, why do we howl when we're asked to pay for them?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 AM on 02/12/2009
- hark I'm a Fan of hark 111 fans permalink

This doesn't prove that you are not upper-middle class. It proves that under Reaganomics even upper-middle class doesn't get you very far. All the wealth has been shifted upwards toward the top 5%, especially the top 1% and the top .1%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 AM on 02/12/2009
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Best stimulous- if banks borrow or are given money from the gov't, they MUST use at least 75% of it to make consumer loans available at interest rates no higher than 4%. That would allow people to consolidate debt, pay it off at reasonable rates, have money to save and put probably billions back into the economy. The banks would still make a profit and would be forced to operate more efficiently and have less to spend on obcene bonuses, stadium namings, and corporate jets.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:42 AM on 02/12/2009
- spartanmom I'm a Fan of spartanmom 13 fans permalink

ok for the very very short term but a consumer driven economy is unsustainable and I suspect that we are witnessing the beginning of its death throes.

We need to working towards a value added economy and manufacturing is the only way to get there

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:47 AM on 02/12/2009
- luciadulu I'm a Fan of luciadulu 11 fans permalink

I would love to see that happen. In fact, if I were a bank, I would think that the MOST profitable market right now would be consumers with average credit looking to get out from under hideously inflated credit card rates. I'd "settle" for making my millions over the course of twenty or thirty years instead of milking a consumer for the most I could get before they go bankrupt, which appears to be the gameplan of Citibank, Chase, Bank of America, and all the erstwhile solid corporate citizens.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 AM on 02/12/2009
- rickey56 I'm a Fan of rickey56 2 fans permalink

Effectively the Republicans revealed and got most everything out of the bill that President Obama would have never gone against Pelosi in public and said get rid of things in the bill because he shouldn't have let her put the bill together in the first place. It was a total embarassement of Democratic spending and not stimulus. The kind of education spending that was removed shouldn't have been in there in the first place. Obama didn't get played by the Republicans. The Liberal Democrats tried to play him. Everything he does is playing to the Center where the country is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 AM on 02/12/2009
- TXfemmom I'm a Fan of TXfemmom 192 fans permalink

Ou family household tax is within this range, but I would gladly continue to pay that to assist those who have lost their jobs, their health care, their hopes, and their homes.

We have greed at every level of our society. As a society, we must feel that all of us are in this together and begin to act that way. Irrespective of religion, I do feel that as a society we shall be judged by how we treat the least of us and the way that things occur and change so quickly now, any of us could suddenly find ourselves in that position.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:40 AM on 02/12/2009
- shanefish I'm a Fan of shanefish 10 fans permalink
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TX, thank you for your kind heart in this time of crisis! I hope many people read your post and feel the need to re-evaluate their own position. Any of us could be on the chopping block. The sooner we start acting like a COMMUNITY, the better off we'll be!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 AM on 02/12/2009
- spartanmom I'm a Fan of spartanmom 13 fans permalink

Here! Here! TXfemmom!

I'm with you. I never complain about my taxes because look at the nations whose citizens aren't paying taxes.

Somalia
Zimbabwe
DRC

It's worth everything I own not to be in one of those!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 AM on 02/12/2009

Thank you for your generosity of spirit. I'm a teacher and the sole support of our family since my husband lost his job. At 60, even though he is a software programmer, he's been out of work for a year. We're coming to grips with the fact that he may never work, again.

The loss of that $200 in tax cuts hurt -- we are struggling THAT much. Our state employee health insurance payment increased 100% this year to $523/ month which is 18.8% of my take home pay!

We never lived lavishly or irresponsibly. We bought a modest house, put down a large down payment and got a fixed mortgage. The nest egg we sacrificed to create pretty much vanished with the Market.

4 college degrees between us, and we're VERY scared! With the State Stabilization money cut out, our state will begin laying off teachers in a few weeks. If I lose my job, we will lose our healthcare insurance (COBRA costs will be completely unaffordable), and our house? Gulp.

The other night, after tucking our son in, we sat at the kitchen table, held hands and cried.

This is just one in millions of stories. It's just that I was so hopeful when I saw the State Stabilization money -- why did they cut that? Doesn't anyone care about teachers and our children's education?

THIS is Bush's legacy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 02/12/2009
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