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'America Needs Jobs' Idea No. 1: A Payroll Tax Holiday

First Posted: 09/21/10 10:13 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:45 PM ET

Unemployment

(Part of the America Needs Jobs series.)

The only reason we still have a payroll tax is because it's been specifically used to fund the two most successful and progressive social programs in American history: Social Security and Medicare.

Otherwise, we would have gotten rid of it ages ago. On its own, it's the most regressive tax imaginable: 12.4% of your salary (typically split between you and your employer) no matter how little you make, and capped at an annual salary of $106,800.

So for a millionaire, it's nothing; for the working poor, it's an enormous wallop. And worst of all -- especially in a period of widespread joblessness -- it is literally a tax on employment.

As Philip Klein writes in the American Spectator (explaining why Republican Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels supports an emergency one-year suspension or reduction in the Social Security payroll tax):

A reduction in the payroll tax would boost the economy in several ways. Like any reduction in taxes, it would mean that individuals would be able to keep more of their earnings, and thus have more money to inject into the economy. But the unique aspect of the payroll tax is that it's also paid by employers -- it is, in fact, a tax on employment. If you were to lower or eliminate the payroll tax for a period, it would make it effectively cheaper for businesses to hire new workers, or to at least maintain their current workers, until the economy improves.

Earlier this month, the White House was said to be seriously considering a payroll tax holiday before dropping the idea, apparently because it might have muddied the Democratic message on Social Security.

There are different visions of how a payroll tax holiday would work. Liberals focus on reducing the employee contribution; conservatives on the employer contribution. You could conceivably suspend either or both.

Suspending both would result in employees getting a bigger paycheck even as the employer pays out less. So far, everyone seems to agree that the missing tax revenues would be paid into the Social Security Trust Fund from other sources.

When it was still being discussed at the White House, staffers were said to have been debating a range of options, such as applying it only to new hires or limiting it to small businesses.

There's already one form of payroll tax holiday on the books: Any private-sector employer hiring a worker who has been unemployed for at least 60 days does not have to pay the 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax on that employee for the duration of 2010.

Historically, the idea has been championed by the right, which in and of itself makes the left suspicious -- particularly when Social Security is involved. Some liberals also have qualms about distribution. Chye-Ching Huang of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities points out that higher-paid workers would get more money back than lower-paid ones, and calls the employer part of it an "inefficient windfall" for businesses.

But others, like James Galbraith of the University of Texas are very supportive -- especially if the Social Security Trust Fund is made whole by increasing taxes on the rich and on estates.

"The policy of tax relief for workers should remain in place until unemployment falls below six percent, at which time it can be gradually phased out," Galbraith writes. "Tax relief for the wealthy is a failed strategy that should end now; a higher personal tax rate will induce companies to retain and invest their earnings, as they used to do."

Over at the American Enterprise Institute, they've been flogging the payroll tax for a while. John H. Makin wrote back in December 2008:

The best available fiscal policy measure would be a sharp reduction in the payroll tax, which would boost household disposable income while giving firms an incentive to retain more workers on their payrolls. Total annual collections from households and firms of payroll tax levies total about $625 billion, about 7 percent of disposable personal income. A payroll tax is labeled as the primary means to finance Social Security and Medicare benefits, but those benefits are financed out of government revenues and would, of course, continue to be provided at their full level. The payroll tax is a poorly designed fiscal measure because it acts as a tax on employing labor and, in times of falling demand, a tax on retaining labor. The payroll tax is the primary tax paid by more than 60 percent of American households and so constitutes a marginal disincentive to further work.


If the payroll tax (of which households pay half directly) were suspended--say, for a year or eighteen months--households would experience an immediate 3.5 percent increase in disposable income that they could employ to sustain consumption and pay down debts. Since the payroll tax is regressive, falling more heavily on lower income households, its repeal would be progressive, while transferring a substantial increase in disposable income to the low-income households who are likely to need it most and therefore likely to spend most of it.

For firms, a reduction in their payroll tax payments would reduce their incentive to lay off workers by reducing the cost of keeping workers on the payroll. In effect, firms would be prompted to shift more toward labor as a factor of production because of a reduction in the tax on employment of labor that the payroll tax entails.

Even Nouriel Roubini, co-founder and chairman of Roubini Global Economics, is optimistic about the payroll tax holiday's effects. The man nicknamed "Dr. Doom" writes:

The argument that increased demand for capital leads to greater demand for labor (i.e., if you buy more machines you need workers to run them) has not held up. Firms are investing in capital goods, equipment and offshore offices that allow them to produce the same amount of goods with less -- and lower labor costs. To avoid a chronic increase in the unemployment rate, we need to subsidize the demand for labor -- achieving job creation -- rather than making it cheaper to buy capital, as investment and other tax credits would do....


To maximize the incentives for private-sector hiring, there should be sharper reductions to the payroll taxes paid by employers than for those paid by employees....

Low-income workers have historically shown a much higher propensity to consume when given extra money, so the payroll tax cut should be designed to provide a larger-percentage break to those on the low end of the income scale compared with the upper middle class.

On Monday, at a CNBC town hall, host John Harwood asked President Obama about a payroll tax holiday.

"Well, this is something that we've examined," Obama said. "And we are going to be working with businesses to see does it make sense for us to initiate some additional incentives in order to hire."

So, Harwood followed up, does that mean the idea is still in play? Obama wouldn't say.

TOMORROW IN THE AMERICA NEEDS JOBS SERIES: More Money For State And Local Governments

*************************

Dan Froomkin is senior Washington correspondent for the Huffington Post. You can send him an e-mail, bookmark his page; subscribe to his RSS feed, follow him on Twitter, friend him on Facebook, and/or become a fan and get e-mail alerts when he writes.


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(Part of the America Needs Jobs series.) The only reason we still have a payroll tax is because it's been specifically used to fund the two most successful and progressive social programs in American...
(Part of the America Needs Jobs series.) The only reason we still have a payroll tax is because it's been specifically used to fund the two most successful and progressive social programs in American...
 
 
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12:56 PM on 11/18/2010
"The problem with this is the people who don't have to spend every dime they earn aren't spending. They are saving. Big business has plenty of money to invest but they can't see how in the current economy to invest it and make a profit on it. So they hoard it. In hard and uncertain times everyone who can tends to save and hoard their cash. The government needs to be the consumer of last resort."

Classic liquidity trap argument, although a bit fragmented. Money that is "horded" by people, not just the rich, goes into savings accounts, where banks then make available to people seeking loans. Since we work on a fractional reserve lending system, where banks can lend ~$30 to every $1 they have in reserves, that means a person with $1M in the bank is making $30M available to anyone qualifying for a loan. So in essence, people saving money creates more wealth, so long as there are people willing and qualified to borrow. Then again, I would argue that this is far from an ideal system that you want, but at 30:1 lending power, even if only 3:1 dollars were lent out and put back into the economy, and paid back by qualified borrowers, you could make the case that more money is still being transferred to consumers, which is generated by the savers.
01:23 AM on 11/08/2010
Since the election this past week, the President has hinted he might let the Bush tax cuts on the wealthy continue. If he does, he will be forfeiting the primary means by which a payroll tax holiday can be paid for. And thereby he will be forfeiting the primary source of funds ($700,000,000,000) for any massive rehiring back to a normal jobs market of the 15,000,000 plus unemployed in this country. Certainly the pain of those 15,000,000 should have been heard loud and clear this past Nov.2nd. Senator McConnell says that $700,000,000,000 is the property of the rich, and they create the jobs. But they are not doing it !! They are not creating jobs. They are hoarding their "property" as McConnell calls it. The upcoming slight increase in the tax rate on the rich could easily fund a payroll tax holiday which could put ten million back to work. The rich would be re-imbursed for the slight tax increase to the extent they are directly and indirectly owners of business by the government financed "free labor" they would be supplied through a pay roll tax holiday for employers who rehired the unemployed. Is "free American labor" not good enough for the top echelons of society, that they should prefer cash in the form of unending tax cuts instead?

Please President Obama, insist that the tax cut expire on those that make over $250,000 per year, so that you have a way to fund a payroll tax holiday.
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Donald Fannin
provocatuer
02:38 PM on 10/15/2010
The problem with this is the people who don't have to spend every dime they earn aren't spending. They are saving. Big business has plenty of money to invest but they can't see how in the current economy to invest it and make a profit on it. So they hoard it. In hard and uncertain times everyone who can tends to save and hoard their cash. The government needs to be the consumer of last resort.
05:03 AM on 09/26/2010
What we need is a broad-based revenue system that taxes consumption, not investment, so that capital and savings and investment, which create jobs, are encouraged. The savings rate in the US is improving but is still quite low. Look at the most successful economies in Europe...
Germany and Austria both run a positive trade balance, with export driven economies. Austria's unemployment never went over 6.5%, and is normally 3 to 4%, or full employment. They have a VAT which spreads the burden, so the wealthy and the middle class all pay taxes. To make it progressive they tax most purchases at 20% but tax food and housing at 10%. Health care is basically provided by the state to all, and costs about 10% of GDP vs. our 17%, and is high quality. Income from salary is taxed at rates like ours, but investment income and capital gains are taxed at low rates to encourage capital investment and savings. There is no death tax, so wealthy people from all over Europe move to Austria, and invest their wealth in Austria, to avoid the death tax. Eliminating the death or "estate" tax encourages savings rather than conspicuous consumption. Their system works, far better than ours. Why not study what works elsewhere?
We should phase in a VAT tax, and reduce income taxes. And cut the corporate tax rate to 20 or 25% to encourage job creation here.
05:00 AM on 09/26/2010
It is absurd to propose a "payroll tax cut" without proposing a new revenue source to make it up.
The government does not provide all these benefits for free, they cost money. Most middle class Americans already pay no income taxes, or as little as 4 to 5% on average, so reducing the payroll tax basically means the middle class are paying next to nothing.
Tax burdens are meant to be shared fairly, not focused on solely the wealthy. And the Bush tax cuts have already effectively been repealed, because we just passed a 3.9% "payroll tax" on all investment income. It will all go to the less well off since the wealthy never get back what they have already paid in to social security.
So we have now raised the true top marginal federal rate to 40%, where it was pre-Bush, and the capital gains and dividend rate to 19%. You simply can't make it up by taxing the rich, at higher rates you will just encourage them to move overseas or shift to tax free bonds.
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TMMA
your micro-bio did not meet our guidelines
07:25 PM on 11/04/2010
Please source:
"Most middle class Americans already pay no income taxes"
01:22 PM on 09/25/2010
Get rid of income tax altogether and replace it with a flat national sales tax. That way the people who can afford yachts and Ferraris pay their fair share as well as people like my able-bodied neighbor who trots down to the local 7-11 on a daily basis and purchases soda, cigarettes, beer and snacks and has been on ssi forever for his 'heart condition' pays his.

Billions of tax payers money is wasted. The war in Iraq is just one example of a multitude.
03:42 PM on 09/22/2010
So let me get this straight. You want to not even require people to pay anything into their social security now?? You want them to just get the social security benefits for free? Well it is not free for the people paying for it. Already 47% of the country pays no income tax. That is appalling. We are in this mess because of runaway upper elite compensation and income and the fact that they are not paying their share, and on top of it, almost half of the country pays nothing in income taxes. Now they get social security for free on top of it?? Anybody that cares about fiscal responsibility knows that taxes need to be increased somehow and federal government spending also needs to be cut. Unfortunately neither party is willing to face reality. An honest discussion is needed to confront the runaway debt. This idea, only makes the problem worse at the expense of the middle class yet again, as this is the group that always pays the price the most for fiscal recklessness.

And the employee contribution is not a tax. There is no social security tax for an individual. It is no different then a contribution to an IRA or a 401(k) plan. Those are not taxes. The actual tax is for the employer and you want to defund it??
01:08 PM on 09/22/2010
well, it couldn't hurt. give a 1 year holiday, pumping 625 billion into the economy, and have it paid for by letting the Bush tax cuts lapse for the wealthy, bringing in 700 billion in 10 years.
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12:51 PM on 09/22/2010
A tax holiday as suggested above is not going to do any good and could cause SS to suffer over the long run.
The only answer to our dilemna is to tax companies who outsource our jobs. There is no future of re-employment till companies are forced to pay their share or bring back jobs to this country.
When a nation cares more about profits rather than it's society and well being of it's citizens, why should they reap the benefits of the rest of us are denied? If they were taxed when their goods were sent back to our country, their profit margins wouldn't be so pretty. They are taking our currency to to other countries leaving us with a huge deficit.
Enough is enough of this crap!
Don't buy anything you don't absolutely need unless it is still made in our own country.
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propitiousmoment
the journey is the destination....
10:40 AM on 09/22/2010
Does anyone see a connection between the push to end social security and the push to end the payroll tax that pays for it? Tax holiday will bring about a REAL crisis in SS instead of the phony one that conservatives have been screaming about for the last 40 years. This is a completely moronic idea. If you want to give anybody a break, make it the people who pay tax on UI benefits, and put a floor on the SS tax so that people who make less than $40 or so pay none, then remove the income ceiling so everyone who is getting rich in America pays into the system proportionately to the benefit they receive from being one of us. If they don't like it, send them to Somalia where there is no pesky gubmint interferin' in their prahvit transactions.
01:08 AM on 09/22/2010
Yes! Why the hell are politicians worried about marginal income tax rates? If they want to encourage job growth, they should be giving tax breaks to companies that are actually CREATING JOBS! A payroll tax holiday is a great idea. And why not just give companies a tax credit for each new job they create? They'll start creating jobs a lot faster if there is less risk in doing so. Why is Washington not talking about this?
12:51 AM on 09/22/2010
Why in the heck does the lower income earners have to pay at all and above $106,000 doesn't???? Has anyone ever realized how ridiculous that sounds???? Payroll tax holiday permanently for wages < $50,000 and apply the tax only to earner above $50,000 and NO cessation of it based on income...there would be plenty of dough then!!!! Geez, it's not rocket science, people...
01:21 AM on 09/22/2010
It sounds ridiculous because it is ridiculous. It is the way it is because the people who get the tax breaks are the very same people who make the rules. The more money you have, the more influence you can use to keep what you have.
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
02:26 AM on 09/22/2010
because it is supposed to be for a defined benefit social security....106k is what the defined benefit caps out at.
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roger g
When will we value people over money?
12:13 AM on 09/22/2010
To the obvious Republicans who post here and can't face reality,here are some true statistics. These are based on the day a new President takes office.Jimmy Carter 11,000,000 jobs or 3.1% increase per year. Ronald Reagan 16 million jobs or 2.1% increase per year. Bush Sr. 2 million or .6% per year. Clinton 22 million or 2.5% increase per year, And finally,Bush Jr. only 1 million jobs an increase of .1% (1/10th of a % per year) On a percentage basis,even Jimmy Carter saw a 30 fold increase in job creation than Bush Jr. AND YOU TRY TO HAVE US GO BACK TO THAT> No Thanks P.S. Income rose 22% under Clinton and 2% under Bush Jr. Wake up and smell the coffee.
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
02:27 AM on 09/22/2010
how do you get better than 4.x percent unemployment...you can ask any employer, we were fully employed....the 4 percent left were unemployable.
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roger g
When will we value people over money?
04:28 AM on 09/22/2010
@Oilfield, My comments only show number of jobs created during these Presidents terms in office and the percentage of jobs created per year, Not the unemployment rate.As to the 4% rate you quote,even at that ,we need 2,000,000 new jobs created each year for the number of new people entering the labor force.
10:05 AM on 09/22/2010
May I return to yesterday and the fair tax question. I beleive that in my state the perposed fair tax for just the state not the fed was a mirror of the VAT or the EU and so far I can not get anyone dem or repub to answer my health care question. In my State they were about to place this on the ballot as a state amendment and we were able to have it removed until questions like this were removed. Like private education tuition for elementry and secondary were to be taxed but advanced education was was to be exempt, this is when I asked about health care services. A few months ago I had a procedure and was in the hospital for 26 hours my bill was 44,000.00 if I had to pay 10% tax plus my deductables? I see no difference from fair tax and vat tax from what I have researched and yes it will nolonger be a payrole tax it will be a goods and services tax. I think?
oilfield
large employer per obamacare
10:19 AM on 09/22/2010
its unbelievable that some things arent exempt from taxes...get sick and have to pay a sales tax or vat is deplorable.
12:05 AM on 09/22/2010
When are we going to start talking about cutting spending?
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donmarchi
07:13 AM on 09/22/2010
Ok lets do that, what exactly would you cut? Spell it out for us. Its really easy to just make a blanket statement like that, how about some details?
Are you going to cut medicaid? Cut funding for Veteran's Benefits? Cut funding to develop new weapons or computer programs for our nation's security?
What exactly would you going to cut?
10:27 AM on 09/22/2010
how about cutting the irs! People who never payed into SS for 20 quarters from getting SS and medicare, the states should provide medicad. Why do we give more food stamps to people who pay high rent and small amounts of food stamps to people who life in lower rent housing? Cut federal employees saleries like we have all experienced these past few years. How about when a guy is shaching up with a single mother and eats her food that she purchased with food stamps and does not work to help support her federal and state funded home? Or the legal immirgrant families from Russia, Poland, Romania... who have 6 to 10 children and are getting $1000.00 a month in food stamps. I see these things with my own eyes. I work at a non for profit food pantry. Cut saleries at fanny and fredie! Make people put 20% down on a home. We need to challenge ourselves again. Go back to days of working hard and reaping what you produce. Encourage everyone to have the dignity of working for a living. There is something for everyone to do to allow everyone to have self respect.
moldndecay
Only that day dawns to which you are awake
02:05 PM on 09/22/2010
corp welfare - 85B
Agri welfare 13B
Defense ind by 50% - 500B

As to the nations security, the Chinese are 30 years behind us. They have 1 deep water fleet they are building, and will probably scrap, as russia did to their 4 carriers, 2 of which were literally scrapped, and 2 are now in china as tourist attractions. Where we have 11 deep water fleets. Why?

Close 90% of our bases in Europe. Who are we defending against there? Yes I do realize you need fueling stations, and such, hence keeping 10% open.

Close 50% of the bases here in the states, and redistribute the open ones around the country. NE has 1 active duty base. The rest are reserve bases.

Fully fit 4 squadrons of the Osprey, then cut it. Us it as the spear head, not for the entire fleet. If needed, ramp up production, one thing we are very good at.

Go down to 6 deep water fleets. 3 to rotate on the 2 sea boards.

Dump the reliance on expensive mercenaries to do the job our military is there to do.
11:52 PM on 09/21/2010
Dan Froomkin is right about the tax being regressive by the very rich don't have to continue to pay the same proportion for all income level. But the payout is very progressive. He doesn't mention that. The payout begins at 90% at the lowest wage band and gets to be only 15% at the upper wage band. So it is progressive when one retires. The upper income people gets lots less benefits at 65 than the lower income people compared with how much they have contributed.
12:53 AM on 09/22/2010
OKay, didn't realize that. Very good point...