The Distribution of Tax and Spending Policies in the United States
| By Hodge, Scott | |
| Proquest LLC |
Introduction and Overview
Governments at all levels throughout
While the distribution of the tax burden is a frequent topic of debate-especially in
The goal is to compare how much families at various income levels pay in all taxes-from state and local motor vehicle licenses to the federal individual income tax-to how much they receive from government spending programs-from cash and in-kind transfer payments like
We find that the combined effect of government tax and spending policies is to redistribute more than
Interestingly, we find that the biggest net beneficiaries of this increase in redistribution from 2000-2012 are middleincome families and working lower-income families (those in the second quintile). These were the families most targeted by economic stimulus programs and more generous tax credits. Of the
These findings have particular relevance to the current tax reform debate because distributional issues are one of the key sticking points to reform proposals that would cut marginal tax rates while broadening the tax base. But tax progressivity is only half the picmre, because progressivity can be achieved through both taxes and spending. Thus, if moving to a flatter, more economically neutral tax code reduces progressivity in the tax code, overall progressivity of the fiscal system can be maintained with slight adjustments to federal spending.
Top Line Results for Total Government Taxes and Spending in 2012
In 2012, governments at all levels collected
As one can see in Chart 1, high-income families paid far more in taxes than lowerand-middle-income families. For example, the average amount of taxes paid by families in the top quintile (i.e., the top 20 percent) was
The average redistribution amount shown in Table 1 is derived by subtracting the average spending received by each income group from the average tax amount paid by that income group. For some groups, the net amount will be positive because they receive more in government spending than they pay in taxes. For others, the net amount will be negative because they pay more in taxes than they receive in spending.
As Chart 1 illustrates, the typical family in the lowest 20 percent in 2012 (with market incomes4 between
Looking next at families in the second quintile (with market incomes between
Interestingly, middle-income families (with incomes between
At the other end of the income scale, the top quintile (with incomes above
Chart 2 presents the tax and spending relationships as a ratio to give us another way of understanding how much families receive in spending for every dollar that they pay in total taxes. The Chart shows that the ratio for each of the bottom three quintiles is above 1. This means that (as a group), those quintiles are the recipients of more spending than they pay in total taxes.
For the bottom quintile, the ratio of overall spending to overall taxes is 5.28, meaning these families receive
The overall ratio for families in the middle quintile is 1.48. They receive
For families in the top quintile, the overall ratio of spending to taxes is 0.29. They receive
Table 2 and Chart 3 show how the redistribution from tax and spending policies affects the overall distribution of income. Prior to redistribution by government, the top 20 percent of families earned more than half (55 percent) of the nation's market income. After accounting for the effects of government tax and spending policies, we find that the share of the nation's income earned by these families fell to 39.6 percent, which represents a 28 percent reduction of their pre-redistribution income.
Not surprisingly, redistribution policies take a greater share of the income of families in the top 1 percent. In 2012, these families earned 18.2 percent of the nation's income, or nearly
For the bottom quintile, the opposite occurs. The bottom 20 percent of the population earned 3.1 percent of total market income in 2012, but redistribution increased their incomes by
Individual Results Add Up To Total Redistribution
When aggregated, these results for average families tier up into a national measure of how much total income is redistributed by tax and spending policies from some groups of Americans to other groups. In total, as Chart 4 illustrates, the aggregate amount of income redistribution from the top two quintiles (the top 40 percent) to the bottom 60 percent in 2012 is estimated to be
Table 2 shows these results in more detail. Approximately half of the
Distribution of Federal vs. State and Local Fiscal Policies
There are many reasons why the federal government's fiscal policies are more redistributive than the fiscal policies of state and local governments. First and most obvious, the federal government simply spends more and taxes more than state and local governments. In 2012, the federal government spent twice as much as state and local governments.5
Second, the federal tax system is more progressive, especially the income tax. Because state and local governments tend to rely more on sales taxes and property taxes rather than progressive income taxes, these systems impose a greater tax burden on low-income families than the federal government.
Third, the spending done by state and local governments is less focused on transfer programs. State and local governments tend to be engaged more primarily in providing core government services to citizens such as education and public safety. Finally, those state and local government programs that are transfer programs are typically financed in large part via aid from the federal government. In order to avoid double-counting, this study classifies state and local spending that is financed via federal government aid as federal government spending.6
Trends from 2000 to 2012
This section addresses the question of how much government redistribution via fiscal policy has changed since the turn of the century. In other words, have fiscal policies overall in
Fiscal policy in
While the federal government was cutting income taxes over the past twelve years, it was also increasing spending. Spending for defense and homeland security was increased considerably following the
At the state and local level, states faced fiscal pressures following the recessions of 2001 and 2008, prompting some to raise taxes, cut spending, or both. Overall, however, state and local taxes increased at roughly the same rate as incomes over the twelve-year period. Generally, property tax collections grew faster than other major tax sources, although they slowed down considerably following the bursting of the housing bubble. Individual income taxes, which are a major, progressive state and local tax source, grew slower than incomes. The third major state and local tax category, sales taxes, grew at roughly the same rate as incomes.
On the state and local expenditures side, health care expenditures increased faster than incomes, while expendimres on education increased at roughly the same rate as incomes. In totality, state and local spending increased faster than both incomes and taxes over the twelve-year period. Overall though, the changes in fiscal policy made by state and local governments pale in comparison to the changes made at the federal level.
Changes in the Distribution of Taxes and Spending from 20002012
These changes in fiscal policies and economic conditions over the past twelve years have had a measureable impact on the distribution of government taxes and spending. That being said, estimating how the distribution has changed in that time period is difficult due to the historically large federal budget deficits that have been in place since 2008. Specifically, because the federal budget deficits over the past five years have been so large, estimates of how the distribution of taxes and spending has changed in that time period depend largely on the methodological treatment of budget deficits (outlined in the methodology section below).
The baseline results for this paper find that income redistribution has increased slightly since 2000. These results are based on the assumption that todays deficits are essentially borne by, or paid for, in some way by todays taxpayers. The way we account for this assumption is to "close" the deficit by proportionally increasing taxes and lowering spending on todays households. (The methodology section explains this in more detail.)8
However, another approach is to assume that todays deficits are a transfer of income from fumre generations to todays taxpayers. The purpose of this section of the smdy is to give readers a better understanding of how these two approaches affect the question of how much redistribution has changed over time.
Table 3 shows the amount of income redistribution as a percentage of market income for each of the five quintiles from 2000 to 2012. Positive figures indicate that the typical family in that group saw an increase in their overall income as a result of redistribution, while negative figures indicate that the typical family in that group saw a reduction in their overall income as a result of redistribution.
The results are presented under both approaches: (1) changes in the amount of income redistribution assuming the deficit is closed on current taxpayers, and (2) changes in redistribution assuming the deficit is redistribution from fumre taxpayers.
Changes in the Amount of Income Redistribution Assuming Deficit Is Closed on Current Taxpayers
Starting first with the base scenario that current deficits are borne by current taxpayers, we can see that there has been a shift in the amount of redistribution to lower-income groups over the past dozen years. For example, in 2000, typical families in the bottom quintile saw their incomes rise by 340 percent as a result of redistribution. The amount of redistribution benefiting these families hit its lowest point in 2007 (during the peak of the economy's growth), boosting their incomes by about 274 percent.
After 2008, the amount of redistribution to these low-income families began to grow again as a result of a combination of new government programs put in place following the onset of the Great Recession (including the 2009 stimulus bill) and of greater claims for unemployment benefits. By 2012, however, the amount of redistribution to this group had climbed back to 283 percent of their incomes, still short of the level in 2000.
The apparent decline in redistribution to the bottom quintile over the past dozen years is not necessarily due to a reduction in spending on them. Instead, it is largely due to the fact that the market income of these families grew fairly quickly from 2000 to 2012 and their resulting share of total taxes increased during that time period. Thus, the amount of spending they receive is smaller relative to their higher incomes and tax payments.
By contrast, the amount of redistribution to the second and middle quintiles did increase over the past dozen years. In 2000, redistribution meant a 50 percent increase in overall income for families in the second quintile and a 15 percent increase in income for middle-income families. By 2012, redistribution delivered a nearly 60 percent increase in overall income for typical families in the second quintile and a 17 percent increase in income for middle-income families.
The increase in redistribution to these two income groups is largely the result of the growth of federal income tax credits, especially refundable credits, targeted at helping working families. Families in the bottom quintile generally do not benefit from tax credits. Most either do not file federal income tax returns because they do not work, or they may be ordinarily "well-ofF' families who simply had a bad year in business or investments. However, the second and middle quintiles are home to many working families who benefit from tax credits such as the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and the Child Credit, both of which were expanded in the 2000 to 2012 time period.
Not surprisingly, the increased redistribution to low- and middle-income working families has come at the expense of high-income working families and the wealthy. Again, Table 3 shows the increase in the amount of income lost to redistribution by high-income families. For example, in 2000, families in the fourth quintile (with incomes between
Families in the top quintile (those earning over roughly
The top 1 percent of families also lost more of their income to redistribution over the past twelve years. In 2000, redistribution reduced their incomes by 37 percent. But by 2012, that share had increased to nearly 41 percent.
We should note that the methodological assumptions of our base scenario plays a part in these results, most evidently at the top of the income scale. As was mentioned above, in our base scenario we assume that deficits are not redistribution from the future. Thus, half of these high deficits are closed by proportionally higher federal taxes, and because high-income families pay a disproportionate share of the federal taxes (see Table 1), these deficit-induced tax increases cause the amount of redistribution from the top income groups to increase.
Changes in Redistribution Assuming the Deficit Is Redistribution from Future Taxpayers
By contrast, if we consider deficits as redistribution from future generations, then the net level of redistribution from the top quintile has actually decreased over the past twelve years, while the amount of redistribution has increased to all other quintiles. In essence, todays families are all winners if deficits are assumed to be redistribution from future generations. That is because under this scenario, these households bear none of the costs of current deficits either through higher taxes or reduced spending.
Nowhere is this more evident than in the results for the fourth quintile. Table 3 shows that in 2000, families in the fourth quintile lost 5-5 percent of their income to redistribution. By 2007, as a result of rising incomes, the amount of income lost to redistribution by these families fell to just 0.3 percent. However, in 2008, when the economy went into recession and deficits began to soar, these families became net beneficiaries of redistribution from the future. When the deficit topped 10 percent of GDP in 2009, the redistribution from future taxpayers boosted the overall income of these families by 6.8 percent. Lower deficits today have reduced this share to 4.7 percent.
Table 3 shows that the amount of redistribution received by both the second and middle quintiles increased even more under this assumption than under the base scenario assumption that deficits are borne by todays taxpayers. The amount of redistribution to the second quintile jumped from about 46 percent of income in 2000 for these families to more than 76 percent today. The amount of redistribution enjoyed by middle-income families grew from over 12 percent in 2000 to more than 29 percent today at the expense of film re taxpayers.
Conclusion
When analyzed in the aggregate, governments at all levels in
Federal tax and spending policies drive most of the redistribution in America today. The lowest-income families receive
Comparing redistribution since 2000, one can see that the amount of income redistribution from the top quintile, when measured as a percentage of the group's market income, has increased over the past twelve years when one assumes that todays large budget deficits are borne by todays taxpayers, although income redistribution to the bottom quintile has fallen when using that same metric. However, it will surprise many to learn that over the past twelve years, redistribution to middle- and lower-income families has increased measurably.
The ultimate lesson of this study is that taxes and spending both have distributional effects. When lawmakers focus solely on tax distribution and ignore spending distribution they get a highly distorted picture of how the nation's fiscal system treats Americans in different income groups. Lawmakers can remove equity as an issue in tax reform by matching any loss in progressivity on the tax side with an equal increase in progressivity on the spending side.
Study Methodology
At its most basic level, this study allocates hundreds of tax and spending categories to each family using
Many methodological decisions must be made when conducting a smdy such as this. For example, how should spending on public goods such as national defense be distributed across income groups-on an equal basis, according to income, or some other variable like wealth? How should in-kind (non-cash) transfer payments like
The thorniest of these issues is the treatment of public goods like national defense. There are generally two schools of thought regarding how government spending should be treated: the "cost of services" approach and the "benefit principle" approach.
The cost of services approach distributes government spending based on each family's share of the total cost to government from providing the government service. The cost of services approach makes no assumptions about how people benefit from public goods, it simply divides the spending equally across families based on the government's cost of providing the service.
For example, under the cost of services approach, national defense is distributed to each family based on the average cost of provision, where the average cost is based on each household and the number of persons. Specifically, 50 percent of national defense is distributed evenly to each household, while 50 percent of national defense is distributed evenly to each person.
By contrast, the benefit principle approach distributes the spending on public goods to people based on their share of the nation's income; in other words, high-income people are assumed to derive more benefits from national defense than low-income people. Here we distribute government spending based on each family's share of the benefit from each government program. The benefit of a spending program for a family is how much the family would (hypothetically) be willing to pay to keep that program in existence.10 For example, under the benefit principle approach, national defense is distributed to each family based on each family's share of the nation's income, as it is assumed that high-income families would be willing to pay more for national defense than low-income families.
For simplicity, this report presents the results solely in the context of the cost of services approach. However, the results under the benefit principle approach are presented in the appendix of this special report, below. The comprehensive study upon which this report is based discusses the results thoroughly under both approaches. That study is available at http: //taxfoundation.org/article/distributional-analysis-fiscal-policies-united-states-2000-2012.
Because the income-based benefit principle approach assumes that more public goods spending flows to wealthier households than under the more uniform cost of services approach, we find that this measure shows less redistribution overall, but that amount is still significant. For example, the income-based benefit principle approach shows that in 2012 governments at all levels redistributed approximately
On the other hand, if we assume that the benefits of public goods are more evenly distributed across all families (cost of services approach), we find that the total amount of redistribution is
In addition to transfers and consumption items, governments in
Another critical issue is how to account for large federal deficits. For the purposes of this study, we assume that the burden of current deficits falls on current taxpayers.11 In order to account for this, government deficits are closed by decreasing spending proportionally and increasing taxes proportionally. The split is half and half. For example, if government ran deficits of
For most major federal taxes, this study's method of allocation follows those of existing respected distributional analyses such as those done by the
Federal payroll taxes are assumed to be borne entirely by the wage earner, including both the employee and employer portions. For federal consumption taxes (such as tariffs, excise taxes on tobacco, alcohol, gasoline, etc.), the burden is assumed to be borne by end-use consumers. Finally, for the federal corporate income tax, half of the amount is distributed to each family based on its share of overall labor compensation (such as income from wages and supplements to wages such as employerprovided health insurance), while the other half is distributed to each family based on its share of capital income (e.g., income from capital gains, interest, dividends, etc.).
At the state and local level, individual income taxes, sales taxes and property taxes make up the bulk of tax collections. For sales taxes, it is assumed that the taxes are passed forward to the end user of all consumer goods, whether the taxable sale occurs directly to the consumer or via a businessto-business transaction. For each family in the microsimulation model, direct sales taxes are estimated using
The issue of how to allocate state and local property taxes is important and has been somewhat controversial among tax experts.
This smdy sought to use the new view of the property tax.14 The new view assumes that each asset's property tax is composed of a general tax on capital component (based on the national average rate) and an excise tax (or subsidy) component equal to the difference between the specific asset's rate and the overall national average rate. However, because finding specific asset tax rates for every jurisdiction across the nation is virtually impossible, a simplified method for allocating the property tax is used.
Specifically, national property tax collections (excluding personal property) are divided into four categories and then allocated based on individual allocators: property taxes paid by non-residential corporate business (allocated via corporate capital income), property taxes paid by non-residential noncorporate business (allocated via non-corporate business income), property taxes paid on owner-occupied housing (allocated via real estate taxes paid), and property taxes paid on rental housing (allocated via rent consumption, adjusted for state property tax differentials). Under these assumptions, the property tax is regressive at the low end of the income spectrum but progressive at the top end of the income spectrum.
Finally, it should be noted that this smdy simply distributes the aggregate amounts from the
of regulatory policies, except to the extent that taxes finance regulatory agencies.
Key Findings
* The question of who benefits from government spending is just as important as the question of who pays taxes. In other words, how do tax and spending policies redistribute income?
* American's lowest-income families receive
* As a group, the bottom 60 percent of American families receive more back in total government spending than they pay in total taxes.
* Government tax and spending policies combine to redistribute more than
* The total amount of redistribution has increased slightly over the past 12 years. Middle-income and working lowerincome families were the biggest beneficiaries.
* Lawmakers can remove equity as an issue in tax reform by matching any loss in progressivity on the tax side with an equal increase in progressivity on the spending side.
Note to readers:
It is important to note that the results featured in this paper assume a "cost of services " methodological approach. This means, among other thing, that most public goods like national defense are assumed to be distributed evenly throughout the population. In the interest of full transparency, the appendix of this paper presents results under an alternative "benefit principle"approach, which distributes many public goods like national defense based on income, under the assumption that high-income families benefit more from public goods than low-income families. Under this approach, the aggregate amount of redistribution from the top 40 percent to the bottom 60 percent is
2 Detailed information about the study and its methodology may be found in its accompanying white paper.
3 Family is the unit of analysis, which is narrower than households. Income percentiles contain an equal number of persons and an unequal number of families. Because high-income families tend to have a larger number of persons per family, percentiles at the top of income spectrum contain fewer units than those at the bottom.
4 Market income is income derived from the returns to labor and capital-wages and salaries, supplements to wages such as health and retirement benefits, and capital income sources such as capital gains, dividends, interest, rental income, etc. Market income excludes government transfers such as
6 This is done in order to match up the spending to the ultimate taxes financing the spending. Programs that are jointly financed by federal and state/local governments, such as
7 Also in 2013, new taxes to finance the Affordable Care Act went into effect; and in 2014, the bulk of the spending for ACA begins. Therefore, income redistribution will likely increase further when this type of analysis is done again in the future. For an analysis of the distributional effects of the Affordable Care Act, see
10 Technically, the hypothetical question is, "How much would this family be willing to pay for this program assuming the benefits were fully excludable?"
11 Since the purpose of this study is to measure redistribution, we are essentially assuming that deficits are not redistribution from the future.
12 Taxes are increased for each family proportional to its total taxes paid, and spending is decreased for each family proportion to its total spending.
13 As noted previously, the fundamental question posed in this study is, "What would a family's taxes paid equal if its share of the tax burden was equal to its share of government spending?" One could also ask, "What would a family's government spending equal if its share of government spending was equal to its share of taxes paid?" In a balanced budget world, these two approaches provide equivalent answers to estimating the amount of redistribution.
14 For a layman's overview of the debate over the incidence of the property tax, see lecture notes from Prof.
References
Bureau of the Census, State and Local Government Finances, http://www.census.gov/govs/local/.
By
1 Gerald Prante, PhD is adjunct fellow at the
Appendix: Benefit Principle Approach
The tables and figures in this appendix present the results under the benefit principle approach as opposed to the cost of services approach presented in the main body of this report. The benefit principle approach shows a smaller level of redistribution from highincome families to low-income families than the cost of services approach. Because the benefit principle approach distributes most public goods according to cash income shares, spending is significantly skewed to highincome taxpayers under the benefit principle approach, unlike the cost of services approach where spending is distributed fairly equally across the population.
A summary table showing the difference in key results under the cost of services approach and the benefit principle approach is presented in Table A-0. The comprehensive study upon which this special report is based discusses in more detail the differences between the two approaches.
| Copyright: | (c) 2013 Tax Foundation Inc. |
| Wordcount: | 6780 |



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