THINK PROGRESS
The Associated Press’ Stephen Ohlemacher is out with an article
lamenting the tax burden levied on the richest Americans who are
“paying some of their biggest federal tax bills in decades even as the
rest of the population continues to pay at historically low rates.”
The piece, which seeks to contextualize the political debate
surrounding the deficit in economic data, devotes its first eight
paragraphs to “the poor rich,” characterizing the current tax structure
as a great burden on higher income Americans. It’s not until paragraph
16 that Ohlemacher departs from the article’s opening premise to mention
that the income gap between the rich and everyone else has exploded,
helping to create the difference in tax rates.
Ohlemacher kicks off his article about the “new analysis” from the
Tax Policy Center by lamenting that “families with incomes in the top 20
percent of the nation will pay an average of 27.2 percent of their
income in federal taxes,” while “The average family in the bottom 20
percent of households won’t pay any federal taxes” and can claim “more
in credits than they owe in taxes.”
A quote from a fellow at the Center, which is described as a
nonpartisan “research organization,” succinctly sums up the problem: “My
sense is that high-income people feel abused by being targeted always
for more taxes,” Roberton Williams tells Ohlemacher. “You can understand
why they feel that way.”
To learn if middle class families feel “abused” in the current
economy or why high income families pay as much as they do, the reader
must skip past seven full paragraphs of political context about
President Obama calling on Congress to close a “bunch of tax loopholes
that are benefiting the well-off and the well-connected” (an idea that
sounds absurd in light of the already unbearable tax burden), Senate
Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) rejecting that premise, and
Democrats proposing a tax on “people making more than $1 million” to
replace the sequester.
In paragraph 24, Ohlemacher finally presents a reason for the higher
tax rates — though even this is delivered as an opinion from “Liberals
and Democrats” and is not accorded the factual tone of Williams’
observation that the rich feel “abused.”
“Liberals and many Democrats say rich families can afford to pay
higher taxes because their incomes have grown much more than incomes for
middle- and low-income families,” Ohlemacher writes, quoting CBO data
showing that “after-tax incomes for the top 1 percent of households more
than doubled from 1979 to 2009, increasing by 155 percent,” while
“incomes for those in the middle increased by just 32 percent during the
same period.”
The author then consults Chuck Marr, director of federal tax policy for
the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, who, he points out is
employed by “a liberal think tank.” Marr finally explains that higher
taxes on the rich are the result of “three decades in the United States
where we had a tremendous increase in inequality” and tells Ohlemacher
that this “disparity in income is a big reason why tax bills for the
rich are approaching 30-year highs. As the rich get richer, a greater
share of their income is taxed at the top rate, he said.”
It’s almost as though the author is upset to learn of this simple
explanation, for he immediately follows it up with a quote from a
representative from the Heritage Foundation, who predictably argues that
“raising taxes again on the wealthy would reduce their incentive to
save and invest, hurting long-term economic growth.”
With that, the conventional wisdom is restored and Ohlemacher can
tell his readers that raising revenue is a liberal solution that will
hurt the rich, while tough spending cuts to entitlements and
discretionary programs are necessary to stabilize the national debt.
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