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- <text id=93TT0985>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: Welfare For The Well-Off
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 36
- Welfare For The Well-Off
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>America's comfortable classes may think Clinton is putting the
- squeeze on them, but he's barely touching billions of dollars
- in subsidies and tax breaks
- </p>
- <p>By DAN GOODGAME/WASHINGTON--With reporting by Jon D. Hull/Chicago
- </p>
- <p> Most of the patrons come to Chicago's Metropolitan Club for
- the prime beef and the 67th-floor panorama of the city by the
- lake. But the exclusive, oak-paneled club also offers an excellent
- view of America's welfare culture.
- </p>
- <p> That's what Mary Grigsby learned as she waited on tables for
- the corporate executives, lawyers and politicians who frequent
- the club. She watched them carefully keep track of their receipts
- so they could write off their cocktails and meals as a "business
- expense," subsidized by average taxpayers who enjoy no such
- deduction. Grigsby, 40, a single mother who lost her job after
- an injury and supports herself and four children on welfare,
- recalls that many of her customers "think you're scum if you're
- on food stamps, but they're the first to cut corners. I'd see
- them writing off `business' dinners with their girlfriends or
- wives. I finally realized that they're on welfare just like
- me, only they don't call it that."
- </p>
- <p> President Clinton may champion welfare reform for the poor,
- but he plans to cut only a fraction of the far more expensive
- federal handouts enjoyed by well-off Americans. As Clinton drafts
- a plan to slice $145 billion from the annual deficit by the
- end of his term, he is considering--and mostly rejecting--suggestions from his economic advisers and independent budget
- analysts that the U.S. could save more than $60 billion a year
- by digging deeper into the federal-spending programs and tax
- breaks that largely benefit the wealthiest 10% of Americans,
- which means households earning more than $75,000 a year. Even
- the middle class enjoys an assortment of tax breaks on such
- items as vacation homes, health care and retirement benefits.
- </p>
- <p> "You can't balance the budget just by cutting benefits to the
- wealthy, but you can get a lot further than they would like
- you to believe," says a White House official. Rather than a
- sharp rise in the overall tax rates, which would spur the wealthy
- to seek tax shelters abroad, a cut in the spending programs
- and tax breaks enjoyed by upper-income Americans would better
- serve economic efficiency and incentives, argues a Clinton aide.
- "Rich people don't care about higher top rates because their
- lawyers and accountants can always find ways around them," the
- official says. "What they care about is their deductions and
- entitlements."
- </p>
- <p> In many ways the current system allows the wealthy to claim
- more than their fair share of benefits. Robert Shapiro, a budget
- expert at the Progressive Policy Institute and a campaign adviser
- to Clinton, points out that the most affluent 4% of American
- families, who earn more than $100,000 a year, collect more than
- 8% of all federal subsidies for retirement--equal to about
- $30 billion a year. According to Shapiro, Clinton could address
- this imbalance by stating that "those who can take care of their
- own health care and retirement are obliged not to claim a disproportionate
- share of federal benefits."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's top economic advisers emphasize that he will propose
- some "means testing" of tax breaks and spending programs that
- benefit the wealthy. But in general, like other politicians
- in both parties, Clinton is finding it easier to pitch for reforms
- in the main welfare program for the poor (Aid to Families with
- Dependent Children, or AFDC, budgeted at $16 billion a year)
- than to dismantle the subsidies now taken for granted by campaign
- contributors and other members of the comfortable classes. Here
- is where the money is, some of which Clinton is pursuing, but
- much of which is nearly untouched:
- </p>
- <p> SOCIAL SECURITY SUBSIDIES Many retirees believe they are only
- getting back what they've paid in Social Security taxes over
- their working lives. The truth is that because of the rapid
- rise in benefits in recent decades, the average person retiring
- today at 65 gets back all the money he paid into Social Security,
- with interest, by age 71. "After that," says Paul Hewitt, a
- budget expert at the National Taxpayers Union, "you're on welfare."
- And the average retiree lives until 81. These heavily subsidized
- benefits are financed by regressive Social Security taxes--payroll deductions apply only to the first $57,600 of income
- this year--that have more than doubled over the past decade
- and that fall most heavily on younger and lower-paid workers
- who will not get out of the system what they are paying in.
- The subsidizing of retirement benefits can be justified for
- the elderly poor, but not so easily for seniors who can afford
- to finance their own retirement.
- </p>
- <p> At present, couples who earn more than $32,000 in retirement
- income (and who typically own their homes and other assets worth
- several hundred thousand dollars) are taxed on 50% of their
- Social Security benefits. Clinton is leaning toward a proposal
- to tax those couples on 85% of their benefits, which would save
- $5.8 billion a year over the next five years, and would affect
- only the wealthiest 25% of retirees. Example: a couple with
- $61,000 in retirement income, including $10,000 in Social Security
- benefits, would see their taxes rise by about $980 a year. Clinton
- could go further by removing the cap on income subject to Social
- Security taxes, and using the proceeds to cut those taxes on
- middle- and lower-income workers.
- </p>
- <p> HEALTH-CARE SUBSIDIES Like Social Security, the Medicare program
- pays benefits (for hospitalization and other medical treatment)
- to all retirees, regardless of their income. As with Social
- Security, retirees collect far more from Medicare than they
- paid in taxes to the program. Taxing even half this subsidy
- for the wealthiest one-fourth of retirees would raise $5.4 billion
- a year. An additional premium charged to couples who earn $125,000
- a year, for doctors' services received through Medicare, would
- net $1.9 billion more a year.
- </p>
- <p> When an American receives health insurance through his employer,
- that benefit is not taxed as income. This exemption costs the
- Treasury $65 billion a year and subsidizes corporate executives
- and janitors alike. Clinton is considering, but is unlikely
- to announce till later, several proposals to tax employer-provided
- health insurance above the cost of basic coverage. One option
- would tax as income all employer-provided health insurance that
- costs more than $335 a month for family coverage (top-rate premiums
- often cost companies as much as $1,000 a month) and would raise
- $18.6 billion a year.
- </p>
- <p> HOUSING SUBSIDIES Less than 20% of the poor (below the poverty
- line of $13,924 for a family of four) receive federal housing
- aid, while a large majority of those who make more than $100,000
- do so, mainly through tax deductions for payment of mortgage
- interest and local property taxes.
- </p>
- <p> During the 1980s, federal housing aid for the poor was cut 73%,
- to $9 billion, while the cost of deductions for mortgage interest
- and property taxes more than doubled, to $47 billion. This deduction
- is targeted to relatively prosperous taxpayers. Consider: only
- half of American families own their homes, and only half of
- those take the mortgage-interest deduction. (Most of the others
- have paid off their mortgages, or earn too little to itemize
- their taxes.) As a result, nearly a third of the tax subsidies
- for home ownership went to the 4% of taxpayers who earn more
- than $100,000 a year.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton is considering several options for curtailing this tax
- break. One proposal would limit the mortgage-interest deduction
- to $20,000 a year for couples filing jointly, and would save
- the Treasury $4.7 billion a year. A tougher option would allow
- upper-income taxpayers in the 28% and 31% brackets only about
- half the deduction they now enjoy. This proposal would net $15
- billion a year and would hit only the top 13% of taxpayers.
- </p>
- <p> Real estate dealers, housing contractors and mortgage lenders
- argue that the mortgage-interest deduction encourages home ownership
- and stable neighborhoods. But such countries as Australia and
- Canada have about the same home-ownership rate as the U.S.,
- without any mortgage deduction. Economists also contend that
- the mortgage-interest subsidy encourages Americans to buy more
- costly homes than they would otherwise. That tends to reduce
- their savings and financial investment, and is one reason that
- Americans lead the world in 3,000-sq.-ft. homes, while the Japanese
- and Germans lead in manufacturing.
- </p>
- <p> BUSINESS MEALS AND ENTERTAINMENT These expenses are 80% deductible
- to businesses. Reducing the deduction to 50%, which Clinton
- is considering, would net $3.1 billion a year. Eliminating the
- deduction would produce several billion dollars more.
- </p>
- <p> INHERITANCE Current law provides a tax break for wealthy inheritors
- of stocks, bonds, real estate and other property. When a person
- dies and passes on those assets, there is no tax on their appreciation
- or capital gains. Ending this exemption could net $3.4 billion
- a year.
- </p>
- <p> AGRICULTURE Farm-aid programs initiated in the Great Depression
- and intended to help small family farmers through hard times
- now pay nearly half their benefits to farmers who earn more
- than $100,000 a year and who own assets worth more than $1 million.
- During the 1980s, farm subsidies swelled from $4 billion to
- $21 billion, and the wealthiest 15% of farmers collect two-thirds
- of that money.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, scarce water from federal dams and irrigation projects,
- often worth $100 an acre-foot at market prices, is sold to farmers
- for $7 to $25 an acre-foot. Such subsidies often encourage farmers
- to use marginal, desert land to grow crops like cotton, which
- already are in surplus. The government provides similar federal
- tax breaks for grazing leases. Adopting the modest reforms of
- agricultural subsidies suggested by experts at the Congressional
- Budget Office would save $6 billion a year.
- </p>
- <p> OIL, GAS AND MINING Special tax breaks for depletion of mineral
- reserves and for expensing of drilling and mining equipment
- could be repealed to save $1.7 billion a year.
- </p>
- <p> UTILITIES Founded in the 1930s, the Rural Electrification Administration
- may have outlived its usefulness in an age when 99% of rural
- America has electricity. The program now acts mainly as a subsidy
- for utility companies. Privatizing it would save $2 billion
- a year. Privatizing the Tennessee Valley Authority would save
- another $2 billion. Charging market prices for electricity from
- federal dams would net $1.6 billion.
- </p>
- <p> Another way to trim subsidies for the well-to-do would be an
- across-the-board reduction that might be called the 15% solution.
- Under current law, any amount of itemized deductions is worth
- twice as much to the highest taxpayer as to the lowest taxpayer.
- For a couple earning $200,000 and paying taxes at the top marginal
- rate of 31%, a deduction for $10,000 in mortgage-interest payments
- reduces their taxes by $3,100. But a couple earning $30,000
- and paying the lowest marginal tax rate of 15% could spend the
- same $10,000 for mortgage interest but would save only $1,500
- on their taxes.
- </p>
- <p> This inequity could be redressed, in essence, by cutting in
- half the benefit of itemized deductions for upper-income taxpayers.
- Such a move would save the Treasury a whopping $61 billion a
- year, enough to meet Clinton's goal of cutting the deficit by
- $145 billion over four years, with money left over to finance
- most of his program of new "investment" in public works, job
- training and education. Because only 1 in 4 taxpayers claims
- itemized deductions, and because half of those are in the lowest
- tax bracket, this proposed limit on deductions would hit only
- the highest-paid 13% of taxpayers.
- </p>
- <p> That group, however, wields clout far out of proportion to its
- numbers. Thus the 15% solution is fiercely opposed by a wide
- range of lawmakers such as Senate Finance Committee chairman
- Pat Moynihan. Not only would this drastically discourage charitable
- giving by anyone above the lowest tax brackets--thus hurting
- churches, schools, symphonies and all other charities--it
- would mean in effect that wealthier people would have to pay
- tax on more than half the value of their legitimate deductions.
- </p>
- <p> Though reducing subsidies for the well-off would spare the majority
- of Americans, a Clinton adviser surmises that "the problem is
- [the cutbacks] hit almost every member of the political class:
- in Congress, the Cabinet, the White House staff, the national
- news media, the business managers and professionals, the campaign
- contributors." Clinton, however, may have no choice but to further
- squeeze the well-off if he can't raise the money he needs from
- all his countrymen.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-