Small Business Resources, Business Advice and Forms from AllBusiness.com

Tax cuts are in sight: but the average African-American will get less relief than the average...

By Bennett, Robert
Publication: Black Enterprise
Date: Monday, May 1 1995

Congress is determined to cut taxes, a move that some should cheer.

Unfortunately, the average African-American has less reason to cheer than the average white person. And worse, many blacks--those who occupy the lowest rung of the economic ladder--will actually be hurt if the pending tax

reductions are matched by cuts in spending.

Such conclusions can be drawn from data prepared by Andrew F. Brimmer, a member of the BE Board of Economists, who heads his own Washington-based economics firm, Brimmer & Co.

The problem, according to Brimmer's numbers, is that a relatively large proportion of blacks are in the lower-income brackets and pay lower rates on their income taxes, or no taxes at all. Some of the tax cuts, though, are designed primarily to help people in the middle-income brackets.

One proposal, for example, would give every family a $500 tax cut per child. But if a family pays no income taxes (which is true of 16.4% of African-American households versus 6.4% of white households), the exemption has no meaning. And, if cuts are made in social programs to help offset the loss of tax revenues, many African-Americans would be far worse off than they are today.

In terms of straight income taxes, too, the average African-American would benefit less than the average white American. Brimmer points out that blacks paid $59 billion in income taxes in 1993, which was about half the amount they would have paid if their incomes had been on a par with those of whites.

That means that if income taxes were cut by 10%, the savings for African-Americans would be only $5.6 billion, while the savings for a comparable number of white Americans would be about $11 billion.

Brimmer slices the cake a number of ways to make his point. African-Americans, he says, account for 12% of the nation's households, but they pay only 5.9% of federal income taxes and 6.5% of state income taxes. These are "graduated" taxes, in that the greater a family's income, the greater the tax rate. These are the taxes Congress plans to cut.

On the other hand, blacks tend to pay about the same as whites in non-graduated taxes, such as Social Security and excise taxes. There are no plans to cut these taxes.

Of course, these numbers pertain to averages. Middle-income blacks would benefit as much as middle-income whites. This puts socially conscious middle-income Americans--black or white--in a dilemma: Should they support the proposed tax cuts for their personal interest, or should they oppose them out of concern for those at the bottom of the economic ladder?

In addition, make sure to read these articles: