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Tax Time: Here's Your "Receipt"
Quote:
View: Tax Time: Here's Your "Receipt"
Source: CBSNews
posted with the TFP thread generator
Tax Time: Here's Your "Receipt"
WASHINGTON, April 15, 2008
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(CBS) Tax season became a little more taxing this year, with the average person spending more than a day and more than $200 collecting, calculating and compiling those numbers for the tax man, according to a report based on Internal Revenue Service figures.
As CBS News correspondent Bob Orr reports, once the deadline's been met, how does the money end up getting spent?
In total, the average tax bill this year tops $13,000, and most taxpayers have no idea what the government is doing with their cash.
"They might know in some broad sense that we spend hundreds of billions of dollars on this or that, but they have no idea really what their money is going for," says taxpayer advocate Jim Kessler.
Kessler's non-profit group has prepared a "receipt" - an itemized breakout of government spending.
What's Uncle Sam is spending the most taxpayer money on? Defense.
The average American household is paying $2,761 for defense in 2007, or put another way, enough to cover 12 car payments for a new Honda Accord.
Social Security is nearly as expensive: $2,663. That's about enough to heat and cool a home for a year.
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Read the report "What You Paid For."
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The average household is paying $19 for the office that tracks hurricanes, about the cost of a fancy umbrella. And just over $12 for National Parks, the cost of one bleacher seat at D.C.'s new Nationals Park.
Some items seem like relative bargains: $313 for education; $99 for farmers; just $62 for all federal law enforcement.
But another big ticket item is interest on the National Debt. For this, the average taxpayer is forking out more than $1,000 this year.
"That's like taking $1,000 and lighting a match to it," Kessler said.
Some government spending is paid for with pocket change. The Consumer Product Safety Commission, which monitors toy safety, costs just 29 cents a year. And the White House? Even less. It costs just 18 cents.
But nothing about government is free.
The tax man himself at the IRS costs the average American family $49 a year - about the same price of the software you'll need for next year's taxes.
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Quote:
View: What You Paid For
Source: Thirdway
posted with the TFP thread generator
What You Paid For
TO: Interested Parties
FROM: Jim Kessler, VP for Policy and Tess Stovall, Policy Advisor
RE: What You Paid For
If you wrote a check for more than $13,000, you would want to know exactly
what you were buying. As is it turns out, $13,000 is about what the typical working age taxpayer paid to the federal government in 2007. That's a lot of money for anyone, but for a taxpayer earning about $64,000, that's one-fifth of all earnings. Yet nearly all taxpayers have absolutely no idea how that money is spent. At best, they may see a pie chart which shows in broad categories how the federal government spends its $2.9 trillion budget.
This document-essentially a receipt-shows exactly what the typical working age taxpaying household gets for their money in dollars and cents. The question taxpayers and policy makers should ask is "Are you satisfied?" Do you think spending priorities should change or stay the same? Do you think you're getting what you and the country deserve for your payment?
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On Tax day I got home and saw a bit on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric and saw this come up. I decided to look it up and read more about this.
The question I'm posing in this thread is if you had to pay for it upfront as a lump sum this $13,000, would you be more or less scrutinous of the programs and expenditures?
I scrutinize anywhere my money goes. I'm happy and a carefree spender when I am the spender. But the moment I am asked to give it up to someone else upfront, I want to know where and how it will be spent. I won't give it up without some responsibility or accountability. Ask me for a lump sum of money with no information on how it will be spent, I'm less inclined to scrutinize how the monies will be spent.
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