Top Banner
Taxes and the Economy
31

Taxes and the Economy

Jan 02, 2016

Download

Documents

talulah-taylor

Taxes and the Economy. Two Basic Principles of Taxation. Benefits received principle – people benefit from the taxes they pay. Two Basic Principles of Taxation. Benefits received principle – people benefit from the taxes they pay - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Taxes and the Economy

Taxes and the Economy

Page 2: Taxes and the Economy

Two Basic Principles of Taxation

Benefits received principle – people benefit from the taxes they pay

Page 3: Taxes and the Economy

Two Basic Principles of Taxation

Benefits received principle – people benefit from the taxes they pay– Ex. We pay a large tax on gas, and that tax foes to

maintain the roads which we use to drive on

Page 4: Taxes and the Economy

Two Basic Principles of Taxation

Benefits received principle – people benefit from the taxes they pay– Ex. We pay a large tax on gas, and that tax foes to

maintain the roads which we use to drive on

Ability to pay principle – those who have the greatest income should pay the highest tax rates

Page 5: Taxes and the Economy

Two Basic Principles of Taxation

Benefits received principle – people benefit from the taxes they pay– Ex. We pay a large tax on gas, and that tax foes to

maintain the roads which we use to drive on

Ability to pay principle – those who have the greatest income should pay the highest tax rates– Ex. Our income tax system

Page 6: Taxes and the Economy

Two Other Characteristics

Sometimes the gov’t will give tax breaks to encourage growth, this is known as the productivity principle

Page 7: Taxes and the Economy

Two Other Characteristics

Sometimes the gov’t will give tax breaks to encourage growth, this is known as the productivity principle– Ex. Gov’t will cut 10% of taxes if business upgrades

equipment

Page 8: Taxes and the Economy

Two Other Characteristics

Sometimes the gov’t will give tax breaks to encourage growth, this is known as the productivity principle– Ex. Gov’t will cut 10% of taxes if business upgrades

equipment

Because the gov’t creates the taxes, they try to be hush-hush

Page 9: Taxes and the Economy

Two Other Characteristics

Sometimes the gov’t will give tax breaks to encourage growth, this is known as the productivity principle– Ex. Gov’t will cut 10% of taxes if business upgrades

equipment

Because the gov’t creates the taxes, they try to be hush-hush– They will pass taxes upon those who are least likely

to be offended

Page 10: Taxes and the Economy

Two Other Characteristics

Sometimes the gov’t will give tax breaks to encourage growth, this is known as the productivity principle– Ex. Gov’t will cut 10% of taxes if business upgrades

equipment

Because the gov’t creates the taxes, they try to be hush-hush– They will pass taxes upon those who are least likely

to be offended– Ex. Taxes on sale of alcohol and liquor “sin taxes”

Page 11: Taxes and the Economy

The Burden of Taxes

Three ways to classify taxes

Page 12: Taxes and the Economy

The Burden of Taxes

Three ways to classify taxes– Progressive – more you make, the more they take

Page 13: Taxes and the Economy

The Burden of Taxes

Three ways to classify taxes– Progressive – more you make, the more they take– Regressive – less you make the more they take

Page 14: Taxes and the Economy

The Burden of Taxes

Three ways to classify taxes– Progressive – more you make, the more they take– Regressive – less you make the more they take– Proportional – all pay the same percentage of their

income

Page 15: Taxes and the Economy

Types of Taxes

Personal income tax, there are 3 brackets in this progressive system

Page 16: Taxes and the Economy

Types of Taxes

Personal income tax, there are 3 brackets in this progressive system– 15%, 28%, and 31%

Page 17: Taxes and the Economy

Types of Taxes

Personal income tax, there are 3 brackets in this progressive system– 15%, 28%, and 31%– Greatest source of income

Page 18: Taxes and the Economy

Types of Taxes

Personal income tax, there are 3 brackets in this progressive system– 15%, 28%, and 31%– Greatest source of income

Social Insurance Taxes, proportional tax is the 2nd greatest source of income

Page 19: Taxes and the Economy

Types of Taxes

Personal income tax, there are 3 brackets in this progressive system– 15%, 28%, and 31%– Greatest source of income

Social Insurance Taxes, proportional tax is the 2nd greatest source of income

Corporate income tax, 3rd greatest, range up to 36% of profits

Page 20: Taxes and the Economy

State and Local Taxes

Sales tax is most important for the state

Page 21: Taxes and the Economy

State and Local Taxes

Sales tax is most important for the state Property tax for the local

Page 22: Taxes and the Economy

Where does the money go?

Page 23: Taxes and the Economy

Where does the money go?

Remember, the gov’t is not out to turn a profit

Page 24: Taxes and the Economy

Where does the money go?

Remember, the gov’t is not out to turn a profit Also, elected officials are try to please voters

(what is good politically is not always good economically)

Page 25: Taxes and the Economy

Where does the money go?

Remember, the gov’t is not out to turn a profit Also, elected officials are try to please voters

(what is good politically is not always good economically)

About $1 out of $5 of the GDP is spent by the gov’t

Page 26: Taxes and the Economy

Where does the money go?

Remember, the gov’t is not out to turn a profit Also, elected officials are try to please voters

(what is good politically is not always good economically)

About $1 out of $5 of the GDP is spent by the gov’t

Graphs pg. 251

Page 27: Taxes and the Economy

President and the Budget

President prepares and delivers the budget to Congress

Page 28: Taxes and the Economy

President and the Budget

President prepares and delivers the budget to Congress

By October 1st , that must be passed

Page 29: Taxes and the Economy

President and the Budget

President prepares and delivers the budget to Congress

By October 1st , that must be passed Problem: In the 20th century, the gov’t

generally spent more money that it took in (deficit)

Page 30: Taxes and the Economy

President and the Budget

President prepares and delivers the budget to Congress

By October 1st , that must be passed Problem: In the 20th century, the gov’t

generally spent more money that it took in (deficit)– Now they must collect more in taxes to begin to pay

off debts

Page 31: Taxes and the Economy

President and the Budget

President prepares and delivers the budget to Congress

By October 1st , that must be passed Problem: In the 20th century, the gov’t

generally spent more money that it took in (deficit)– Now they must collect more in taxes to begin to pay

off debts– However, we have problems meeting the budget

each year (war on terror)