Tuesday, April 29, 2014

How the Tax Code Helps Those Who Need the Least Help

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Death and Taxes

     Benjamin Franklin in 1789 wrote, “Our new Constitution is now established, and has an appearance that promises permanency; but in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.“

     Interesting and powerful words to read from one of our most revered founding fathers. They are powerful because taxes, in  Franklin  words, affect all of us one way or another. Taxes are indeed ubiquitous.

     Taxes are fees imposed on the right to earn income. A tax deduction or favorable tax treatment is music to most citizens’ ears because it specifies income that is minimally taxed.

·                  According to the National Priorities Project, America's top earners will get an average tax cut of $66,384 in 2011 while the bottom 20 percent will realize an average tax savings of about $107.

     Seth Hanlon, director of fiscal reform for the Center for American Progress, says that while all tax breaks are well-intended, the "upside-down" nature of some miss their target
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Some Tax Regulations Effects

·       Mortgage Interest  Deduction

     A  study, by rhe Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, on the deductions for mortgage interest for households with incomes between $40,000 and $75,000 averages just $523, while households with incomes above $250,000 enjoy an average a write-off of $5,459 or more than 10 times as much.

·         Capital Gains Tax Rates

     Long-term capital gains tax rates for investmentowned greater than one year are currently 10 to 15 percent, favorable rates when compared to earned income or ordinary wage rates which range from 10 percent to 39.6 percent depending on the amount earned. Only citizens who have money to invest beyond basic living needs can benefit from these favorable rates. The favorable capital gains rates are expected to cost the Internal Revenue Service $38.8 billion in fiscal 2012 according to the Office of Budget and Management.

·           Step up in Basis

     Usually when property is sold for more than the purchase price, the difference is taxed except when a person dies. When a citizen dies that difference between buy and sell price is reset to a price the property would fetch had it been sold at the time of death.  A Stepped-up basis benefits the wealthy the most because they hold the most property. The cost the Internal Revenue Service was $61.5 billion in 2012 according to the Office of Management and Budget.

·         Tax-deferred Retirement Savings Accounts

     Retirement accounts are special accounts like IRAs, 401ks, and profit-sharing plans designed to help people save for retirement. Only people who have extra money can save money for retirement. In 2011, American saved $145 billion in taxes from this deduction. Of that, the Tax Policy Center estimated the top 20 percent of earners received 80 percent of the benefits whereas the bottom 60 percent received only 7%. It’s safe to say those living at poverty level had no benefit because they had no money to save towards retirement.

·         Charitable Deduction

     Taxpayers who give to qualified nonprofits are allowed to deduct their donation against current income. For taxpayers, the value of the deduction increases with a person’s income. For example, someone in the lowest 10% tax bracket receives a $100 deduction for a $1,000 donation. Whereas someone in the 39.6 percent tax bracket receives a $396 deduction for the same amount. In 2011, this deduction was estimated to cost Uncle Sam $53.7 billion according to the United States budget.

  Conclusions

     Tax deductions overwhelming benefit those who make higher incomes. This translates into the higher income earners being able to keep a higher proportion of their income compounding  their wealth substantially over time pushing an ever-wider gap between rich and poor.



Wal-Mart Offers More Than Everyday Low Prices


Courtesy of the Democratic staff of the
U.S. Committee on Education and the Workforce
   
      An update of a 2004 report “Everyday Low Wages: The Hidden Price, We All Pay for Wal-Mart,” prepared by the Democratic staff of the U.S. House Committee on Education and the Workforce revealed some interesting statistics:

  • Wal-Mart is the largest private employer in the United States.
  • A Wal-Mart sales associate is paid on average hourly wage of $8.81 per hour.  Wal-Mart’s Sam’s Club workers earn $10.30 per hour on average.
  •  A 300-person Wal-Mart Superstore in Wisconsin was estimated to cost taxpayers approximately $5,815 per employee in state-supported safety net social services .
  • Between 2007 and 2010, while American median family wealth fell by 38.8 percent, six members of the Walton family, heirs of the founder of the chain, saw their fortunes increase from 73.8 billion to 89.5 billion.
  • The wealth of these six Waltons equals the combined wealth of 48.8 million families at the bottom of the country’s wealth distribution. Said another way, their wealth equaled the combined wealth of 41.5 percent of all American families.

     We can safely assume that the needs and most of the wants of these six members of the Walton family are provided for. Wal-Mart workers helped ensure that fortunate outcome together with the U.S. taxpayers who paid for the programs that helped meet some of the needs of those low-paid Wal-Mart workers that was unmet because they made less than a living wage.


Do the Rich Create Jobs

Harnessing Power

     It is a messy democratic process we have. Political parties want to be in power. Party members can derive strength and power by unifying behind common messages and themes in hopes of attracting like-minded followers. Party leaders test different messages seeing which ones resonate with the most voters to gain their votes and help their candidates get elected. Office holders have authority which translates into power.

Courtesy of iStock
The Message

     A common message reiterated many times throughout the Great Recession by the Republican Party in their pursuit of power has been the notion that raising taxes on the rich would kill job creation. For them, it is an unshakable belief that people with money invest in businesses to make more money. Jobs are the fortunate byproduct of the process. Following this reasoning further, it is the rich who are responsible for creating jobs and we as voters should be grateful. This message rests on the idea that if the rich build the business, the consumer will come.

Real Job Creators

     However, in an article with Bloomberg News, Nick Hanauer, a successful entrepreneur, venture capitalist and author, disagrees. He argues this Republican message has the investment process backwards. According to Hanauer, businesses are started and new workers hired when consumer demand is present.  For Hanauer, raising taxes on the rich makes much more sense. He sees it is as a way of rewarding the true job creators, those middle-class consumers who create demand first out of which investment opportunities for the wealthy emerge to make more money. 


A Hierarchy of Needs

A Question

     What motivates people? Can human interaction be as simply as a random collection of reward-conditioned responses waiting for another opportunity?

An Answer

     In 1943, Abraham Maslow was curious and tried to answer what motivates people. His answer resulted in a theory about human needs which came to be known as Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs. His theory is a set of propositions that explains why human beings act in predictable patterns. These patterns are designed to lead to feelings of human fulfillment.

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The Theory

     The basis of his theory rests on these notions:

1.     A human need is essential. It must be fulfilled because the survival of the species depends on it.  
2.     Human needs are prioritized. One set of needs would have to be fulfilled for the next set of needs to become a priority.
3.     The longer a human need is denied, the greater the energy expended  to acquire it.
4.     A person must fulfill a lower need before progressing on to the next need.
5.      Few people will satisfy all needs in a lifetime yet every person will pursue fulfilling these needs throughout their lives.

An Outcome

     What Maselow’s theory attempts to explain is the arc of every person’s life. People who make a minimum wage that is not a living wage are unable to take care of their first set of needs: food, clothing and shelter.


     Energy is continually expended on securing the basics. Human potential is, in essence, thwarted. As a result, their potential is left unrealized. Unrealized human potential means the human condition as a whole is impoverished. Some would say our present economy is just a symptom of this condition.

Friday, April 18, 2014

Young Guns


 Bring It On

      A trio of young gun journalists shared their insight, experience and enthusiasm with City College of San Francisco Online Journalism students on April 15. All three have blazed trails through journalism's new high tech frontier to jobs at leading news organizations.

Nathan Olivarez-Giles,
Courtesy of Google Images
Staking a Claim

        Nathan Olivarez-Giles is currently a journalist for the Wall Street Journal. “I am leading the push at the Journal to develop a new type of journalism” he said. Olivarez-Giles is pushing the boundaries and tearing down the distinct borders that once divided print and other communication media. Ever since high school he’s been fascinated with technology. Now he combines writing, photography, video and technology in innovative ways to tell any story that needs to be told.

  Olivarez-Giles advice was simple, “Soak up and learn as much as possible from every opportunity that you can.” He holds an entrepreneurial spirit at heart and he is ever willing to hop in the saddle to new tech frontiers.
 
Brian X. Chen, courtesy of Google Images
            Ben X. Chen, author of the popular book Always On, rode his book notoriety and his interests in technology all the way to the prestigious New York Times. These days, Chen writes about the never-ending patent wars mostly among Apple, Samsung, Motorola and Verizon.

He uses Twitter to share analysis, point to good stories, and to share comments with his tech heavy network.  

 
Mark Milian
Courtesy of Google Images
 


Mark Milian was focused on Silicon Valley like a California gold-rush prospector. He thought he could bring something new to tech world. Today he writes for Bloomberg News about how technology is affecting remote cultures.  
 

“Radio, TV and digital video is the new thing that advertisers will pay top dollar for,” Milian said. “We’re still figuring out the best practices.”


 
  
Gold in the Hills
            All three found tech to be the new frontier to practice a time-honored craft of telling good stories. They embraced technology and in doing so stuck the mother lode.
 

Courtesy of Google Images

Sunday, April 13, 2014

What is a Dollar’s Worth?

Is it Useful?
     Actually, a dollar’s value depends on what it buys. Marginal utility is a fancy economic term to describe the amount of value a person derives from spending on a product or service. It is another piece of the puzzle that helps us evaluate and gauge the basis for a living wage.

Making choices
     Take a look at these pictures and decide which is most important for every individual’s well being:

Choice A

Courtesy of Google Images


Courtesy of Google Images

                                    Food versus Yacht  






Choice B

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Courtesy of Google Images
          Clothing versus Jewelry







Choice C

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Courtesy of Google Images

                      House versus Plane






Smart Shoppers

     Those living on a minimum or living wage are smart when it comes to marginal utility. They intuitively know that dollars spent on food, clothing and shelter will provide a bigger bang for their buck. Whereas, the benefit they could derive from a yacht, jewelry or a private plane is just less obvious.

     Saying it another way, minimum wage earners see that dollars spent on food, clothing and shelter have more utility. In essence, they extract more marginal utility from every dollar spent on the basics.

Getting their money’s worth

     As a group, people earning a minimum or living wage derive among the highest marginal utility rates. Dollars spent by this group are in effect worth more.

Minimum wage earners win the Dollar Marathon

The Speed of Money
     Ding! Each time you open your wallet and spend a dollar a race begins. Spending dollars sets off a chain reaction of possibilities. You pay the coffee shop for a latte. The coffee shop owner takes your dollar, along with several others, and goes to the hair stylist. The stylist, now flush with her own dollars, brings her pet to the pet groomers; and on and on it goes.
Courtesy of Google Images
     Dollars are the lifeblood or our economic system. The quicker a dollar moves from one person to the next, the greater the economic activity that is generated. This is known as the velocity of money.

     The velocity of money was at an all time high before the Great Recession of 2008.  People felt secure. They were willing to take risks. Taking risks happens when people are willing to invest, buy more, and save less.

Boom or Bust
     During classic economic boom times, the velocity of money streaks through the dollar marathon breaking all sorts of records.
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     When the Great Recession hit though, many people became fearful and insecure. They closed their collective purses tightly and hung on to every dollar. Spending was exhausted.
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Time Out!  
      The velocity of money hit a dramatic speed bump, in part, because people were unwilling to spend. When push came to shove, people only spent when they had to. They saved the rest. Savings is like a non-productive time out in the dollar marathon.
Courtesy of Google Images
The Winners
     However, the spending habits of the minimum wage earners stayed exactly the same. These folks are the winners of the dollar marathon every time. They have the highest money velocity rates of all consumer groups.  
Courtesy of Google Images
The Gracious Winners
     For the minimum wage earners, every dollar that comes in goes out. Incremental increases to a living wages get spent too because marginal utility rates for every dollar for this group are also high. This group would stimulate the most economic growth if they had more money to spend.

     Minimum wage earners are actually heroes. They saves our economy by spending money regardless of a boom or bust times giving the rest of us a breather until we are ready to join the next dollar marathon.
Courtesy of Google.Images

Breaking News

 
Courtesy of Google Images

April 10, 2014 
Minnesota raises the minimum wage to $9.50 by 2016

April 7, 2014
Maryland raises minimum wage to $10.10 by 2018

April 7, 2014
Minnesota considering raising minimum wage to $9.50 by 2016

April 7, 2014
San Francisco considering raising the minimum wage to $15

March 27, 2014
Connecticut raises minimum wage to $10.10 by 2017

March 18, 2014
Richmond, Calif. raises minimum wage to $11.52 by 2016

March 15, 2014
 House defeats minimum wage increase

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Blame it on Henry Ford

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Henry Ford is best remembered for his car, the Ford. He was an entrepreneur at heart who saw the bigger picture when it came to automobiles. In his mind, it was no contest between the car versus the buggy.
Courtesy of Google Images


Ford understood the power of his concept. He envisioned a time when everyone would want to own a car. In fact, some say he created the American Dream. 






Courtesy of Google Images


He knew how to produce his car too. Ford is credited with inventing and perfecting the assembly lineYet Ford had some hurdles to overcome to mass production. He needed to both train and keep skilled workers in his factory.






Courtesy of Google Images



He hit upon a novel idea. On January 5, 1914, Ford announced his $5 for an eight hour day pay program for autoworkers that were over age 22 and had worked at his factory for greater than six months. He called it his profit-sharing program.








Courtesy of Google Images

 For some, $5 was double the wages they had been making. It caused an outrage among other business owners.He is credited with kick starting the middle class too.
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Ford's workers' were wealthy enough that they could buy the luxury items they produced like a car. Ford started what is now known as a virtuous cycle where people with extra money were creating more demand for the goods being produced.








The Living Wage Fills the Gap


A Living Wage 

      The living wage is the notion that people, who work full time, 40 hours per week, should be able to afford a basic standard of living within a community. Unlike the minimum wage, the living wage is not set by law or by any governmental body. A living wage might be thought of as a socially accepted baseline that is one step above the poverty line.


What are the basics?

     In the United States, the basics generally mean food, clothing, shelter, utilities, transportation, health care, and includes minimal recreation.  The basics do not necessarily include an ability to save for retirement, acquire any skill development or education, or an ability to care for a sick family member.

Minimum Wage versus Living Wage


      The minimum wage, as originally conceived, was designed to provide for a basic living standard. Yet there is an ever-widening gap between what the minimum wage can provide and what it takes to have a standard of living that provides just the above mentioned basics. The concept of the living wage became popular because popular culture discerned that the minimum wage was not keeping pace with what it costs to live independently today..



The Minimum Wage is Born

The Minimum Wage

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     A minimum wage is the lowest rate at which a worker legally can be paid for their labor in the United States.
     . Labor is a broad term but basically it means doing another’s work for a fee. The Minimum Wage Law is the law of the land. Violators can be prosecuted for not paying a minimum wage.

Who sets it?

     The U.S. minimum wage rate is set by the United States Labor Department under authority provided by the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FSLA). It was created after the Great Depression of the 1930s. It established a national minimum wage and prohibited employment of minors to stop child labor. Currently the minimum wage rate is $7.25 per hour. 

What is the point?

Photo courtesy of Google Images
In part, the purpose of the FLSA was to establish a minimum wage rate and to limit the number of hours worked for a standard week. During the Great Depression, it was widely felt workers were being exploited for cheap labor by their employers.

The current poster child for a minimum wage job is the Wal-Mart greeter. A Wal-Mart greeter starting pay is $7.25 per hour. Today. there are numerous examples of low paid workers. At full-time employment, these jobs cannot provide a basic standard of living.

Photo courtesy of Google Images