This post was originally published on this site
Workers shouldn’t be waiting for a windfall in their upcoming paychecks, tax policy experts said Monday as they digested news of President Donald Trump’s executive order deferring payroll taxes.
The order might not bump up take-home money all that much per paycheck — and that’s assuming employers even pause the tax withholding from Sept. 1 to the end of the year, as the order instructs.
With stimulus talks stalling on Capitol Hill, Trump signed executive orders Saturday to try to address last month’s ending of supplemental $600 unemployment benefits,looming student-loan bills and a potential eviction crisis.
“ ‘This modest, targeted action will put money directly in the pockets of American workers and generate additional incentives for work and employment, right when the money is needed most.’ ”
When it came to payroll taxes, Trump’s order said, “This modest, targeted action will put money directly in the pockets of American workers and generate additional incentives for work and employment, right when the money is needed most.”
The order defers the employee’s obligation to pay a 6.2% Social Security tax per paycheck. It applies to people who “generally” make less than $4,000 every two weeks, which works out to an annual salary of $104,000.
The order instructs the Treasury Department to look into how the government can forgive the deferred tax payment. But for right now, at least, observers say the tax obligation isn’t being forgiven.
See also:Social Security could be vulnerable under President Trump’s plan for payroll taxes
Critics question the order’s effectiveness and legality. Sen. Ben Sasse, a Republican from Nebraska, called it “unconstitutional slop.” (Trump, in response, criticized Sasse on Twitter TWTR, +0.80% for going “rogue.”) New York Times columnist Paul Krugman called it “the hydroxychloroquine of economic policy,” referring to the Trump-touted antimalarial drug that a growing body of research suggests is not an effective COVID-19 treatment.
“ ‘It’s not clear whether employers are going to pass the savings on to employees.’ ”
“It’s not clear whether employers are going to pass the savings on to employees,” Kyle Pomerleau, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a right-leaning think tank, told MarketWatch.
Any sort of payroll-tax relief also doesn’t change things for the people who aren’t on payrolls to begin with, Pomerleau added. “There’s a disconnect,” he said. “The millions now who are unemployed are in need of greater assistance.”
Steve Wamhoff, the director of federal tax policy at the left-leaning Institute of Taxation and Economic Policy, was also skeptical. “If your goal is to stimulate the economy — well, there are a lot of low-income people who you’re not going to reach,” he said.
What are payroll taxes and what does the order do?
Payroll taxes consist of Social Security taxes and Medicare taxes. Every pay period, an employee pays 6.2% of their earnings for Social Security and 1.45% for Medicare taxes. Workers pay the 6.2% Social Security tax on annual earnings up to $137,700.
Meanwhile, the employer pays the same rate per paycheck, adding up to a combined 12.4% Social Security tax and 2.9% Medicare tax.
In late March, the $2.2 trillion CARES Act said employers could defer paying their share of the Social Security tax from March 27, when Trump signed the CARES Act, to the end of the year. They can pay back one half of the sum by the end of next year and the second half by the end of 2022.
“ The order would put workers’ obligation to pay the 6.2% Social Security tax on hold from Sept. 1 through the end of the year. ”
The new executive order puts workers’ 6.2% obligation on hold. But what does that mean in practical terms?
The median 2018 household income was $63,179, according to U.S. Census Bureau statistics. Suppose a hypothetical taxpayer made $64,000 before taxes. Slicing $64,000 into 26 paychecks paid on a biweekly basis comes out to roughly $2,461 per paycheck, pre-tax.
The 6.2% Social Security tax of that paycheck would be approximately $152. With two paychecks paid each month from September through the end of the year, that comes to a deferred amount of $1,220 — a hypothetical sum around the size of one stimulus check, albeit in smaller installments.
But the money is still a “long-term obligation,” Pomerleau said. At best, it’s an interest-free government loan, he said.
Trump has floated the idea of payroll-tax relief before. Freezing payment of employee-side Social Security taxes from September to the end of the year would result in $139.5 billion not going to government coffers, at least for the time being, according to an analysis last month from the Institute of Taxation and Economic Policy. The analysis applied the cap in which taxpayers pay 6.2% on their wages under $137,700, not the executive order’s $104,000 cap.
Payroll taxes brought in $914 billion for Social Security during fiscal year 2019, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
There is precedent for altering payroll-tax rules: In the rebound from the Great Recession, the Obama administration trimmed workers’ Social Security tax to 4.2% in 2011 and 2012.
Businesses are still ultimately on the hook to pay the taxes
Unless there’s a law changing the situation, the taxes are due at the beginning of next year, according to Mark Mazur, the director of the left-leaning Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.
“Employers will be reluctant to pass along the deferred taxes to their employees, because they may have to figure out how to recoup those funds when they make the deferral payment,” Mazur said. There could be additional tax headaches for workers who leave their jobs or businesses that close before the end of the year, he added.
“ ‘It is highly questionable whether firms would actually pass the money along to their workers, because it is the businesses that are on the hook for the taxes.’ ”
Stephen Stanley, the chief economist at the broker-dealer Amherst Pierpont, also said businesses will have a close eye on the hassle factor. Because the taxes would be deferred, not waived, “it is highly questionable whether firms would actually pass the money along to their workers, because it is the businesses that are on the hook for the taxes,” he said.
If businesses pass along the money and then have to make sure the feds get it back during tax season, “then it would be a messy affair to somehow go about clawing that money back from their workers,” Stanley said.
Besides, he added, “if businesses did pass the tax holiday funding along, it is doubtful that most households would spend the money, figuring that they would have to pay the money back three months later.”