A small business owner
friend of mine has some thoughts on the 2% payroll tax cut that I would like
to share.
SBO writes ...
Hello Mish
Here's a quick note on the 2% payroll tax cut. We own a couple of small
companies, each with under 200 employees. We provide health insurance to our
employees, but they share the cost. We pay $300 per month per individual, and
any cost above that (including cost increases) are shared 50-50. Our average
salary is about $42,000. The 2% payroll tax cut will be about $70/month for
the average person.
However, our health insurance cost increased by $117 per month for
individuals (more for families) and that was only after altering the
benefits, shopping intensively, and changing providers.
Thus, the same average employee will pay an additional $58.50/month for
increased health care costs. The net additional dollars to the employee will
be $11.50/month. So, spending another $70/month will all be a boost to GDP,
since spending on health care is deemed consumer spending but I don't think
my employees are going to feel any richer.
This adds to what I said in Jobs Forecast 2011
Calculated Risk vs. Mish (correcting a couple of awkward
sentences).
OK there is going to be more
money in paychecks because of a reduction in Social Security collection. In
response, I see ever increasing estimates as to how much that payroll tax cut
will add to GDP.
However, I have to ask "How much of that payroll tax cut will go to
increased sales taxes, state income taxes, and property taxes?"
I have not seen anyone properly address that question. I suggest we need that
payroll tax cut to break even. Certainly taxes of all kinds are going up in
Illinois. Our idiotic governor wants to hike income taxes 33%. Sales taxes
will likely go up as well.
While Illinois may be an extreme example, bear in mind that places where
taxes are not going up will see more layoffs.
SBO adds another aspect I
did not even consider. Some employees who share medical costs with their
employer will have the payroll tax cut completely eaten up before they see a
penny of it. The payroll tax cut will not be there to spend, it will have
already been spent. That applies even more so to the self-insured.
Then there are property taxes, state income taxes, and sales tax increases to
consider (or additional cutbacks in states that do not raise taxes). GDP may
get a small boost from this in theory, but the overall net effect will be a
decrease in jobs and the average taxpayer will not see a dime of the
decrease.
Addendum:
Here is a a reader email from David who lives in North Carolina regarding the
above post.
Hi Mish,
Just read the article and thought I would offer my two cents (maybe a dollar
after you finish this!) on the payroll tax cut.
I am the sole employee of my S Corp, so I am self employed. The 2% FICA cut
is worth about $155 a month to me. I got my annual letter from Blue Cross
stating my new rate for Health Insurance. It goes up $154 a month, so I net
out $1 per month. I if see you in North Carolina maybe we can share a cup of
coffee if we can find a cup for $1.
I read you blog every day along with several others I deem worthy. Really
enjoy it. I am floored by stories of the public unions and pensions in other
states and click on the links to read the full story. NC has no public
unions, virtually no private unions, and a pension system that is solvent NC
public pensions are not extravagant. These stories are unheard of in NC, not
that we don't have a few of other types to tell. Our corruption is a little
different.
NC is facing a 20% (3.7 billion about) hole in the state budget next year.
The politicians are stating they will close it without raising taxes or
borrowing, but I am waiting to see what they do. There is no way to close the
budget without cutting the state payroll. Most State employees have gone
without pay increases for the last two years. I suspect a number of them will
be laid off unless the idea of pay cuts I am starting to hear discussed is
real. The precedent is there, NC cut pay in the Great Depression to close a
similar gap without cutting employees / services.
David
Chapel Hill NC
Mish
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