Presented by Citizens for Tax Justice

Citizens for Tax Justice

The tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003 under Pres­ident Bush are scheduled to expire at the end of 2012. As we approach the expi­ration date, there’s a growing debate about whether and how much of these temporary tax breaks should be extended. Pres­ident Obama has proposed extending the Bush tax cuts for all taxpayers on incomes up to $250,000 ($200,000 for single filers). Some lawmakers have suggested moving the threshold to $1 million.

Read the PDF Version of this Report.

Based on our prelim­inary estimates:

  • High-income taxpayers still get a big tax cut. Using either threshold, even high income taxpayers still get to keep most of their Bush tax cuts. That’s because the tax cuts – primarily lower rates – still apply to income below the threshold amount.
  • Ending the breaks for incomes over $250,000 saves substantial revenue. Extending the Bush tax cuts for only the first $250,000 of families’ incomes saves the U.S. Treasury an esti­mated $60–70 billion in revenue for one year alone, 2013, compared to extending all of the tax cuts.
  • Moving the threshold to $1 million is costly. Extending the Bush tax cuts for the first $1 million of a family’s income saves 43 percent less revenue than the savings esti­mated with a $250,000 threshold.
  • Million­aires get 50 percent of the addi­tional tax breaks from moving the threshold to $1 million. About half of the addi­tional tax breaks resulting from moving the threshold from $250,000 to $1 million actually go to taxpayers with income over $1 million – because they’re getting addi­tional tax breaks on all of their income up to $1 million.

Citizens for Tax Justice

Citizens for Tax Justice, founded in 1979, is a 501 ©(4) public interest research and advocacy orga­ni­zation focusing on federal, state and local tax policies and their impact upon our nation. CTJ’s mission is to give ordinary people a greater voice in the devel­opment of tax laws. Against the armies of special interest lobbyists for corpo­ra­tions and the wealthy, CTJ fights for:

— Fair taxes for middle and low-income families
— Requiring the wealthy to pay their fair share
— Closing corporate tax loop­holes
— Adequately funding important government services
— Reducing the federal debt
— Taxation that mini­mizes distortion of economic markets

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