Thursday, January 24, 1985/The Battalion/Page 17 % ET^ FTF. By Jim Earle Study: low income Americans pay large share of federal taxes Associated Press WASHINGTON — The share of all taxes paid by lower-income Americans has risen over the past two decades, due mainly to increas ing Social Security taxes and a de cline in corporate levies, according to a study released Wednesday. Research by economist Joseph A. Pechman of the private Brookings Institution here found the share paid by the the wealthiest 10 percent of taxpayers has declined since 1966. And while taxes have done little to shift income among various levels of society, Pechman wrote in a book en titled, “Who Paid the Taxes, 1966- 85,” such government payments as Social Security and food stamps have “a major equalizing ef fect on the dis tribution of income.” Those payments have offset some of the redistribution of wealth that otherwise would have occurred un der the tax system, he said. Pechman also found a dollar of The total tax burden has increased on the lowest one- fifth of taxpayers, remained steady on the next-lowest group and rose slightly for everyone else except the top 10 percent, whose tax share declined. ~~~ economist Jo seph Pechman wages is likely to be taxed til a higher i ate this year than a dollar of invest ment income because of long-term reductions in corporate income taxes and a reduced role for local property taxes. But his key finding was that the American tax system — federal, state and local — has become less progressive since 1966. T he federal income tax is generally known as progressive — meaning that it is based on ability to pay and that taxes claim a larger share of each dollar as income increases. The Social Security tax, by con trast, is regressive — the flat rale of 7.05 percent this year applies to the first $S9,600 earned by every cov ered worker. Using what he called the most progressive set of assumptions, Pechman found that over the last two decades, the total tax burden in creased on the lowest one-»fifth of taxpayers, remained steady on the next-lowest group and rose slightly for everyone else except the top 10 percent, whose tax share declined. At the bottom income level, a f am ily paid 16.8 percent in taxes in 1966 and will pay 21.9 percent this year. Pechman said. At the top, the aver age rate was 30.1 percent in 1966 and 25.3 percent this year. The main reason for the growing low-income burden has been the steady increase in taxes to finance Social Security and unemployment compensation, Pechman said. Individual federal income taxes at lower earning levels also went up be cause adjustments in the personal exemption and standard deduction f ailed to keep pace with inflation, he said. Those increases outweighed re ductions in property and corporate income taxes, which are assumed to be passed on at least partially to con sumers. At high-income levels, the overall tax burden has declined because of the reduction in federal income-tax rates enacted in 1981 and the contin uing drop in the share of taxes con tributed by corporations, the econo mist said. ityor Parties no Party matter what you've go to say or sell, our Classi fieds can help you do the big job. Right now, dur ing International Classified Adver tising Week, is a great time to put the Classified to work for you! **+\ JRE ALL: The Battalion 845-2611 WEWANTTOU TO START AT THE TOP. THEN WORK YOUR WUP. You can be part of the greatest alliance in American business history — Electronic Data Systems and General Motors. This alliance combines the information processing strengths of EDS with the resources of the largest company in the nation. 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