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YOU LOSE: Understand Romney/Ryan’s Budget Plan Impact On Working Middle Class

A new analysis confirmed by nonpartisan tax experts has laid bare the Republican tax plan. Here’s how to boil it down.

Paul Ryan’s budget, supported by Mitt Romney and Republicans in Congress will have millions of hardworking Americans pay more in taxes even as the wealthiest few pay less. Tax breaks for them. Tax hikes for you. This budget would cut taxes for hedge fund managers and trust fund kids, while raising taxes on the working middle class.

I implore every American, specifically every working middle class American to study this report as well as the Ryan Plan (from Paul Ryan himself) specifically so you have objective information not colored by the minutia you will be hearing through Right Wing Media and Main Stream Media.

Before making your decisions you must as yourself, which America do we want: a nation where working families pay more so the wealthy can pay less or one where everyone pays their fair share?


JEC Releases New Report on the Ryan Plan’s Potential Tax Implications for America’s Workers

Jun 20 2012

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Bob Casey, Chairman of the Joint Economic Committee (JEC), released a JEC report finding that Representative Paul Ryan’s Fiscal Year 2013 Budget proposal would give large tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans while increasing the tax burden on the middle class.

The report, entitled “Winners and Losers: Understanding the Ryan Plan’s Potential Tax Implications for America’s Workers,” analyzes the impact on families of House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan’s proposal to replace the current progressive tax code with just two tax brackets – 10 percent and 25 percent – while eliminating the alternative minimum tax.

The report finds that the top 0.1 percent of households would receive an estimated average federal tax cut of nearly $1.18 million in 2015 under the Ryan plan, corresponding to a 14.1 percentage point drop in the federal tax rate. Lower-income earners (the bottom quintile) would see the slightest tax savings of only $67 and would enjoy just a 0.06 percentage point drop in their federal tax rate.

To pay for the tax cuts, the JEC report finds, Ryan would potentially have to eliminate tax expenditures that deliver significant tax benefits to middle-class workers. These include tax deductions for mortgage interest, state and local taxes, and charitable contributions as well as the tax exclusions for employer-sponsored health insurance benefits and contributions to 401(k) plans.

After eliminating these tax expenditures, those at the top of the income ladder would still experience a net reduction in taxes – the typical household making more than $1 million will see their taxes fall by more than $286,000 under Ryan’s budget. However, eliminating these tax expenditures would increase the tax burden facing middle-class workers: a household making between $50,000 and $100,000 would face a tax increase of at least $1,358.

“We’ve seen this movie before and it doesn’t end well,” said JEC Chairman Casey. “The Ryan plan doles out tax cuts for the wealthy and asks the middle class to pick up the bill. This new JEC report makes clear that the middle class will be hit hard by the Ryan proposal. To pay for his tax cuts, Chairman Ryan has no choice but to eliminate or drastically reduce tax benefits that help middle-class families meet their health care needs, pay for their homes, and save for their retirement. This is the wrong approach. As we recover from the Great Recession, our focus must be on creating jobs and helping middle-class families – not giving the wealthiest few more tax breaks.”

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

In fact, in 2009, 1,500 millionaires managed to pay no federal income taxes on their millions.

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