YSK: In economics, a negative income tax (NIT) is a system which reverses the direction in which tax is paid for incomes below a certain level.

submitted 6 days ago by andyortlieb@lemmy.sdf.org edited 6 days ago

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_income_tax

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The US doesn't *technically* have a negative tax, but the EITC accomplishes the same basic thing. Whether it's efficient enough, or needs expansion is another story.

Also, in “things that will never happen in the US” we have universal healthcare

In the US it's called "tipping"

That's just equivalent to UBI, isn't it? If you pay out UBI and get the money for it from taxes, then there's an income level below which people net gain money and above which people net lose money.

No, negative income tax usually requires that you make some money and file taxes. UBI doesn't.

One has the intention of encouraging workforce participation. The other tries to help everyone.

Negative Income tax could operate like UBI. The hero of neoliberalism Milton Freedman supported a scheme to transfer wealth like this.

Please edit the title of your You Should Know post to begin with "YSK". It's Rule 1 of the community. Thank you.

You say negative income tax, I hear business subsidies.

but what about
-~- LOOPHOLE WHACKAMOLE -~-
its not technically free for billionaires since they have to pay so much to lawyers

Let's be honest, if the US did something like this, the ultra wealthy who are already not paying taxes would find ways to game more money out of the system.

But it could still help a lot of people.

What are the upside of that vs plain minimum wage?

It reduces the onus on businesses and places it on the government (and this indirectly, taxpayers).

Better for small businesses to hire and thrive.

"But I don't want my taxes to go up!"

Maybe you just need more tax brackets. Where I live, for some reason, a specialized doctor making $250,000/yr is in the same tax bracket as some C-suit making $900,000.

I definitely need more tax brackets where I live.

Never understood the idea of tax brackets. Why isn't it just continuous? Computers are calculating the tax now anyway, not like it would be infeasible.

Could totally do a sigmoid function and just integrate over the income. But the brackets are just discrete approximation of that.

You still have brackets, but they're at every $0.01

I mean to a degree it is continuous. To simplify things the first $10 you make isn't taxed. $11 to $15 is taxed at rate A, $16 to $20 is taxed at rate B, etc. This is what is meant by the progressive tax system. Obviously these numbers are much higher in reality.

People who can't understand this are the ones bragging that they turned down a raise because it would "change their tax bracket". With one exception at very low income, called the benefits cliff, the more money you are paid the more money you take home after taxes.

Does this make tax brackets less confusing? I want to help you and anyone else reading to understand.

I think what they're saying is that it shouldn't be in steps, the tax *rate* should increase as income increases.

So $11 would be taxed at A.2, $12 at A.4, $13 at A.6 and so on. And $11.50 at A.3.

As it is, it's more discrete than continuous (from a mathematical perspective). Another problem is that it usually stops. Like where I live, and it tops out at about $250,000.

Yeah I get what they mean but that's much more complex. I suppose that's what computers are for but it could make it even harder for people to understand and so many people do not understand the current system.

Definitely agree we need more brackets after the top one. Although this only goes so far, as the more wealthy a person is the more likely their income isn't classified as income anymore. I'd love to return to post WW2 tax rates on the rich but we need to do something to make them pay some kind of fair share. It's disgusting what they get away with.

Sounds like a nightmare to try to explain to someone. Technically it should work, but practically it might be difficult.

Why? To me it'd be much more intuitive. I find brackets quite confusing

Brackets are lobbied for. You cant lobby a straight line.

How would an infinitely adjusting tax percentage be intuitive? Brackets are simple. You pay x% on your income in some bracket and y% on your income in a different bracket. You only need simple multiplication and addition to figure out what you would owe.

The brackets are pretty simple. It's percentages and subtractions. Think "buckets" that spill over in the next when they're full, and each "bucket" has a larger percentage that's taken as taxes. Keep the numbers small so its easier. Imagine that there are three brackets. 0-100$ pays 10% tax. 101-200$ pays 20%. 200$ and more pays 30%.

Someone who wins 150$ pays 10% on the money they made from 0 to 100$, and 20% on the 101st dollar until their last, so they'll win 150-10-10=130$ after tax. They didn't win more than 200$, so no money gets taxed at the third bracket's rate.

Say that person wins 250$ next year. Their first 100$ will result in the exact same 10$ in taxes. Their 100th to 199th dollars will be in the second 20% bracket. Their remaining 50$ falls in the last bracket, so gets taxed 30%. They will therefore this year make 250-10-20-15=205$ after tax.

Said person gets a big promotion and is now making 1000$ the third year. Their first 100$ gets the same 10$ tax, same for their second 200$ with the same 20$ tax. They have 800$ left in the last bracket, which at 30% means 240$. So they'd be winning 1000-10-20-240=730$ that year.

Tax brackets are there for progressive taxation. Progressive income taxation is the most fair form of taxation. The least fair is consumption tax - such as sales tax. Sales tax tax disproportionately burdens lower income households. Since most places have sales tax, an aggressive progression of income taxation is called for to balance the scales.

I'm not speaking against progressive taxation, I'm saying the brackets should be continuous so there aren't any sharp turns in taxation. Right now the brackets make the taxation discrete, but I feel it should be continuous.

Oh I see. Well, you gotta understand the public don’t take too kindly to math. Especially politicians.

Wouldn’t it make more sense to, like, have the first 12k dollars tax free and then increase the percentage for everything exceeding this threshold?
The more money you earn, the more taxes you can afford to pay. Especially when you earn only little money this is important for you to survive, while $100k/yr managers could easily afford to pay 50k of those in taxes

A negative income that is better than that. It says, if you're working, but only making $12k, the state will give you money so you now have $20k. (Not real numbers.)

The idea is that it incentivizes participation in the work force, with hopes that the extra money helps you get stable and move up the payscale where you may stop needing the external support.

How does that incentivizes workforce participation? You're giving them money to not work, I think graduated taxes should just not have the NIT portion.

No. If you reported $0 in income on your taxes, you get nothing. There's a minimum income to get anything back. So if you don't work, you get nothing, so you are incentivized to find a job of some kind.

But that minimum should be quite low and attainable.

Living on $50k/year is not easy. The federal poverty line for a family of 4 is $31,200, and many consider those numbers to be much too low.

There's absolutely no need to target normal American households with more taxes. Billionaires already don't pay their (too low) taxes and have far, far more than they need that they've taken from the labor of others. Actually taxing them appropriately would cover everything we could possibly need and then some.

We should be raising substantially the minimum income needed before you have to pay taxes. It's fucking stupid to be levying a bunch of tax on people who are struggling to make ends meet.

What? $50k is even in the richest European countries about as much as 2 people earn per year. €25k/year is the median, give or take 2k.
Subtracted are about 5k in taxes.

Crazy how expensive the US is…

Yeah, European salaries across the board are generally lower than the US by quite a bit, but we also typically pay for a lot more services than Europeans do as generally a lot more is privatized (healthcare, etc.). $100k is typically what most middle class Americans are striving for in order to have a relatively "comfortable" life, buy a house, etc. (though honestly, the housing market today is so fucking insane that even that isn't really enough to buy a house in many places now). The median household income in 2023 was $80,610, for reference.

Everything is relative, who made the product, how long did it take to get where it is, who had to be paid to get it there, how far did it travel, how many tariffs or taxes were paid between here or there, etc, shit Americans forget entirely while voting.

The system you are describing is what most countries use. This is basically just an extension of that intended for people who make so little they need extra assistance.

Actually, the US Earned Income Tax Credit is basically a version of negative income tax.

Don't give the super wealthy any ideas.

What a bad set of graphs! The first one is just wrong.

The tax is never negative. Instead, it plots a progressive tax rate, and calls it "negative".

The second graph is just confusing and detracts from the explanation instead of adding to it.

That graph plots gross pay (x-axis) against take-home cash (y-axis). The far left of the graph (in green) shows people making under 20k taking home more than their "earned" pay. At the extreme bottom is somebody making 1,000/year taking home 10,000. The progressive income tax starts at 20,000.

Not labeling the axises does make it hard to read.

Oh, that's right. Yes, the graph is only bad and not wrong.

Good thing it's a wiki!