Sunday, December 5, 2021

Income Taxes II

 

Georgia Tech Fight Song 

I'm a Ramblin' Wreck from Georgia Tech
And a hell of an engineer 

What does an engineer think of the income tax code? 

Engineers, such as me, think Talking Barbie is correct. Math is hard.  Engineers try to come up with “Rules of Thumb” to use that are close to being correct.  Mathematicians would say is not possible to state Pi exactly because it is an irrational number. Engineers might say “Let’s just get close enough”.  If engineers said that Pi was 3, then this would result in 4.5% error in computations, which is not close enough.  If engineers said that Pi was 22/7, then the error in computations would be only 0.4%, which is probably close enough.  Similarly, non-linear equations, especially non-linear equations of an exponential since the exponential itself is another irrational number, are approximated by engineers as a series of linear equations, also known as straight lines. 

The mean income by quintile (i.e. 20% ranges) is reported annually by the US Census, which also reports the mean income of the top 5 percent. Assuming that the mean income of a quintile is the income of the midpoint of that quintile, or in plain English, if between 20% and 40% of the incomes had a mean income of $12,196 in 2019 dollars, the income at 30%, the midpoint of that quintile, is assumed to be $12,196.  With this assumption, the reported incomes by quintile can be shown to follow an exponential association with a fit of 95.3%.  The transient income, the only coefficient needed for this equation, is $53,450.26 .  This exponential association can be approximated by a series of 6 simple linear equations, with a correlation of 99.88%, as shown in the following figure.

An equitable distribution of income taxes should follow this same distribution of income.  The taxes should thus be 

Taxes = Income * Maximum Tax * Distribution of income

If the distribution of income is approximated by six linear equations, which are the equivalent to tax brackets, and the transient income which is defined by the income distribution is $53,450, then if the median rate is 20%, the Maximum tax rate should be twice that amount, or 40%.  (In a normal statistical distribution, the maximum is approximately twice the mean.)  The effective tax rate is the actual taxes due divided by the income. 

The 2020 ideal tax brackets which reflect the distribution of income are: 

Bracket

Lower Income

Upper Income

Marginal Tax Rate on Income Above the  Lower Income

Fixed tax

Effective Tax Rate Lower Income

Effective Tax Rate Upper Income

1

1

$53,450

14.7%

$-

14.7%

14.7%

2

$53,451

$106,901

30.7%

$7,865

14.7%

22.7%

3

$106,902

$160,351

36.6%

$40,682

22.7%

27.3%

4

$160,352

$213,802

38.7%

$99,335

27.3%

30.2%

5

$213,802

$267,251

39.5%

$182,164

30.2%

32.1%

6

$267,252

40.0%

$287,827

32.1%

40.0%

The actual 2020 rates from the IRS according to those established in the Jobs and Tax Cut Act,  JTCA, are 

Bracket

Lower Income

Upper Income

Marginal Tax Rate on Income Above the  Lower Income

Fixed tax

Effective Tax Rate Lower Income

Effective Tax Rate Upper Income

1

1

$9,875

10.0%

10%

10%

2

$9,875

$40,125

12.0%

$988

10%

12%

3

$40,125

$85,525

22.0%

$4,618

12%

17%

4

$85,525

$163,300

24.0%

$14,606

17%

20%

5

$163,300

$207,350

32.0%

$33,272

20%

23%

6

$207,350

$311,025

35.0%

$47,368

23%

27%

7

$311,025

37.0%

$83,654

27%

37%

The Marginal Tax Rates on income above the lower amount are comparable between the ideal and actual tax brackets.  The major difference between the two tables is the size of the tax brackets. They should be equal in a tax code based on income distribution.  There would be six tax brackets. The range of the tax brackets would be equal to the transient income as established by the distribution of income.  The actual ranges of income covered by the TCJA tax brackets are not equal and are much lower in the lower brackets.  Consequently the fixed amount (i.e. the taxes on the lower income in each bracket)  is lower for the upper brackets.  This results in effective rates that are far less than would be suggested by the income distribution. The upper tax brackets consequently have been paying effective tax rates that are much lower than would be suggested by the distribution of income. 

These lower than ideal effective tax rates have been in place since the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981.  If this was intentional, talk about a long con.  The inequality caused by that, and subsequent tax acts, may have been responsible for the growing wealth gap in the United States.  An income tax code should be based on the distribution of income.  In 1980, before that Tax Act was enacted, the transient income, T, the measure of the distribution of incomes, was only $39,622 in 2019 US Dollars .  A tax code which reflects the distribution of incomes at any T is shown below.  

Bracket

Lower Income

Upper Income

Marginal Tax Rate on Income Above the  Lower Income

Fixed tax

Effective Tax Rate Lower

Income

Effective Tax Rate Upper Income

1

0

$T

14.7%

14.7%

14.7%

2

$T

$2T

30.7%

14.7%*T

14.7%

22.7%

3

$2T

$3T

36.6%

45.4%*T

22.7%

27.3%

4

$3T

$4T

38.7%

72.0%*T

27.3%

30.2%

5

$4T

$5T

39.5%

120.7%*T

30.2%

32.1%

6

$5T

40.0%

160.3%*T

32.1%

40.0%

Adoption of new marginal tax rates may be a "Bridge Too Far" politically.  However adjustment of the ranges of income within each tax bracket might be undertaken which would more closely reflect the distribution of income.  The lowest tax bracket may not be necessary but it is retained here. The changes in the range of income in brackets effects the fixed amount, the amount due on income in the lower brackets, as well as beginning the highest tax rate at a lower income.  This lowering of the lower bound of income in the highest bracket actually has the effect of raising taxes for the current lowest income in the highest bracket because it increases the fixed amount due from taxes on income in lower brackets.  The proposed changes are shown below in red bold font. 

Bracket

Lower Income

Upper Income

Marginal Tax Rate on Income Above the  Lower Income

Fixed tax

Effective Tax Rate Lower Income

Effective Tax Rate Upper

1

1

$9,875

10.0%

10%

10%

2

$9,875

$53,450

12.0%

$988

10%

14%

3

$53,451

$106,901

22.0%

$7,402

14%

18%

4

$106,902

$160,351

24.0%

$19,161

18%

20%

5

$160,352

$213,802

32.0%

$31,989

20%

23%

6

$213,803

$267,251

35.0%

$49,093

23%

25%

7

$267,252

37.0%

$67,800

25%

37%

The change in the tax bracket ranges, would lower the tax rate for the all incomes.  It would also lower the total amount of revenue raised by the income tax.  If the tax code is changed, it is suggested that marginal rates that more closely reflect the distribution of income should also be enacted.  As shown in the figure below, this would lower significantly the income tax rate for all those below approximately $140,000 while raising the tax rates for those with incomes above this amount.  However, these tax rates would more closely match the distribution of incomes.



The

Friday, December 3, 2021

Trust

 

Trust Me

You trust the teachers to teach your children
Trust the mechanic to build your car
Trust the carpenter to build your house
And yet you don't trust your brother at all

Trust but verify?

Regulations that require disclosure, such as Environmental Impact Statements,  weren’t adopted because they are fun.  Regulations that require disclosure were adopted because there was an absence of trust. It is like showing an ID to buy alcohol.  You are required to be a certain age to buy and consume alcohol.  A store clerk might not know you (or if they do, maybe they have to act as if they don’t know you, in order to treat every customer equally).  When you show your ID, the clerk trusts your ID and THAT proves your age.  If a customer uses a fake ID that is a criminal act by the customer, not the clerk.

Regulations are not adopted because of the people who we can trust.  We can be sorry that those people also have to go through the steps required by the regulations .  But there are those who we can not trust, who said they considered something but did not, or did consider it, but in a way that was not acceptable. They are why we have regulations that require full disclosure.  I wish we could trust everyone, but we can’t.  We can empathize with those who should be trusted, that they have to follow these disclosures, but they are not why the regulation were written. And in all likelihood, the ones complaining most loudly about the regulations are the ones who can not be trusted and why there are regulations in the first place.

If I don’t trust you, and you say that you should trust me, you could be lying. Ronald Reagan famously used the old Russian proverb,  “Trust but verify”.  If you trust Ronald Reagan, how can you then object to verification. Environmental Impact Statements are the verification that he required.

Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Dobbs vs. Jackson Women's Health Organization

 

My Country ‘Tis of Thee

My country, 'tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty,
Of thee I sing;
Land where my fathers died,
Land of the pilgrims' pride
From ev'ry mountainside
Let freedom ring!

Is the freedom to have an abortion protected by the Constitution?

“Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and unto God the things that are God’s”.  In the SCOTUS case concerning abortion,  the Supreme Court is NOT being asked to act as God, but it is being asked to act as Caesar.

IMHO, this opinion should not be decided on precedent.  It should also not rely on beliefs, no matter how popular.  It should not rely on whether the opinion might inconvenience any parties.  It should not rely on whether those actions were common law at the time the Constitution was adopted. It should rely on the US Constitution, and solely on the US Constitution, SCOTUS is NOT charged with being an activist who can invent rights not defined in the Constitution.

The Constitution defined that the people are its sovereign. That is what makes the experiment that began over 200 years ago so unique, that the subjects of a sovereign would BE the sovereign.   The subjects, the citizens of the States that were being United through ratification of the Constitution, did not ratify it without assuring that the Bill of Rights defined the rights of each person, to eliminate any confusion between rights of individual subjects and rights of the sovereign.  Those rights are enumerated to include, for the individual, freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom to assemble, freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures, and, especially pertinent in this case before SCOTUS, protection against actions by the sovereign unless the sovereign renders reasonable compensation.

When disputes arise between subjects of the sovereign, then the SCOTUS is charged with determining which subject’s rights prevail.  However the issue before the court is who is a subject.  In the Mississippi case, the state of Mississippi acting through its legislature, is clearly a subject. Those women who seek an abortion are clearly subjects.  Those women are carrying fetuses, and those fetuses may, or may not, be subjects.

The Constitution requires a decennial Census of its subjects to determine, among other things, voting representation.  The question of citizenship should thus be whether the Census, as required by the Constitution, considers a fetus to be a subject, i.e. a citizen.  Children are counted in the Census.  They are subjects, citizens, but do not yet have the right to vote.  Children who are born and die, between decennial Censuses are not enumerated, but they are still considered to be subjects, persons, because at the time of a Census they would have been enumerated.   The Census does not count fetuses.  Fetuses are children who have not yet been born.  SCOTUS has determined,  rightly IMHO,  that fetuses who are viable outside of the womb, are persons and have the same status as children who are born and die between decennial Censuses.  The question before SCOTUS is whether fetuses who are NOT viable outside of the womb are subjects. If they are not subjects, then laws giving special protections to those non viable fetuses, without compensation to the women who are carrying those fetuses, would appear to NOT be protected by the Constitution.

If the State of Mississippi required its citizens to take any action without compensation, and that action was not protected by the Constitution, it should be forbidden by the Constitution.  That the action is for non viable fetuses does not make that action Constitutionally protected, unless those fetuses also have rights under the Constitution. The Court has previously decided that, under the Constitution, those non viable fetuses have no protected rights.  I would hope that SCOTUS continues to uphold this principle.

The personhood of fetuses who are NOT viable outside of the womb is a matter of opinion and belief, e.g. a matter for God.  The status of those non viable fetuses with respect to the Constitution is the matter that is before the court.  Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s.  Do not grant a right to those fetuses that is NOT listed in the Constitution. Unless there is a Constitutional Amendment which establishes that non viable fetuses are persons, the decision of SCOTUS should, IMHO, be clear. A decision by SCOTUS that a non viable fetus is not a person will not be popular with many. But just as paying taxes to Caesar was not popular,  the question is not popularity, but whether the issue is Caesar’s, i.e. the Constitution's, and not God’s.

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Income Taxes

 

I Paid My Income Tax Today

I said to my Uncle Sam
Old Man Taxes, here I am
And he
Was glad to see me
Mister Small Fry, yes, indeed
Lower brackets, that's my speed
But he
Was glad to see me

The rate in a tax bracket is the marginal rate, not the effective rate.

There is a world of difference between speed and acceleration.  We understand that acceleration is important for sprints, but speed is important for marathons. And there is just as much difference between the marginal tax rate (analogous to acceleration) and the effective tax rate (analogous to speed). No one expects a National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, NASCAR, vehicle to win a drag race against a National Hot Rod Association, NHRA, vehicle.  And no one expects a NHRA vehicle to beat a NASCAR vehicle at the Daytona 500.  The tax brackets are only a way to compute taxes.  The rates cited in those brackets are NOT effective tax rates.

If marginal tax rates were uniformly zero, there would be a flat tax rate.  This would NOT be a  progressive tax rate, which mathematically would be described as a convex function.  By contrast regressive taxes, which decrease with increasing income  mathematically would be described as a concave function.

Math is hard.  But the answer is not to make math fit our expectations. Votes to make Pi equal to 3, (Don’t laugh.  In 1897, the Indiana State Legislature considered such a law) because the value of Pi is hard to remember might be  tempting. But such a law would result in computing the circumference and area of a circle incorrectly.  The correct course should be to change our expectations to fit the rules of math, not vice versa. 

For example the marginal rate for the 2020 married filing separately tax bracket for incomes from $207,350 to $311,025 is 35%, but the effective tax rate varies from 23% to 27%. Mistaking the marginal rate for the effective rate could lead to mistakes in policy.

The effective tax rates are progressive, which is necessary but not sufficient in determining if they are equitable.  The effective tax rates should also reflect the distribution of income.  The US Census reports on the distribution of incomes by quintile.  The distribution of incomes appears to follow an exponential function.  The taxes, and thus the tax rates, should also follow this distribution.  If the mean tax rate, say 20%, is set then the maximum tax rate can be computed from this distribution of income. The formula for the taxes which reflects the distribution of incomes is

Taxes=Income*Maximum Tax Rate*(1-exp (-Income/(Transient-Income))) 

If the distribution of income exactly followed an exponential distribution (not function) then the transient income would also be the mean income.  In this were the case, then the median income would be would be 69% of the mean income.  The maximum rate is not higher than the mean tax rate, because there is a bias against those with higher incomes.  It is the inevitable result of a progressive tax system.  With a progressive tax rate, the only way the mean rate could be the same rate for all incomes, is if ALL incomes were equal to the mean.  The maximum tax rate is a consequence of all incomes not being equal and that there are high incomes and low incomes.  The greater the variance in income, mathematically, the higher the maximum tax rate must be.  As Willie Sutton, the bank robber, once said, he did not rob banks because he had a vendetta against banks. He robbed banks because that is where the money is. If taxes on the rich are high then that is because they are rich, not because the tax system has a vendetta against the rich.