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FY 2014 Federal Tax and Spending Policies as Outlined in Obama’s 2010 Budget (Obama OMB Baseline)

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The following distributional tables have been produced by the TaxA tax is a mandatory payment or charge collected by local, state, and national governments from individuals or businesses to cover the costs of general government services, goods, and activities. Foundation’s Fiscal Incidence Microsimulation Model for the FY 2014 Federal Tax and Spending Policies as Outlined in Obama’s 2010 Budget. Click on a link within the table below to view the chosen table in FlashPaper. Those with no link are available in this Excel file.

The letter following the table number refers to the incidence assumption made concerning who bears the burden of the budget deficit. For example, Table 1a assumes that the deficit is financed by a combination of higher taxes and lower spending. Table 1b assumes that the entire deficit is equivalent to an increase in taxes today. Table 1c assumes that the entire deficit is equivalent to a decrease in spending today. Table 1d assumes that the entire deficit is borne by future generations. Table 1e assumes that half of the deficit is borne by future generations and the other half by increased taxes and lower spending today. And Table 1f presents the results excluding payroll taxA payroll tax is a tax paid on the wages and salaries of employees to finance social insurance programs like Social Security, Medicare, and unemployment insurance. Payroll taxes are social insurance taxes that comprise 24.8 percent of combined federal, state, and local government revenue, the second largest source of that combined tax revenue. es and Medicare and Social Security spending.

Baseline: Obama OMB Baseline
Policy: Obama Proposed Budget Policies for FY 2014 (as outlined in FY 2010 budget)

Incidence Assumption

All Families

Married Non-Elderly Families

Single Non-Elderly Families

Head of Household Non-Elderly Families

Elderly Families

Primary Assumptions

Table 1a

Table 1b

Table 1c

Table 1d

Table 1e

Table 1f

Table 11a

Table 11b

Table 11c

Table 11d

Table 11e

Table 11f

Table 21a

Table 21b

Table 21c

Table 21d

Table 21e

Table 21f

Table 31a

Table 31b

Table 31c

Table 31d

Table 31e

Table 31f

Table 41a

Table 41b

Table 41c

Table 41d

Table 41e

Table 41f

Public Goods Allocated Per Person Instead of Income Elasticity = 1

Table 2a

Table 2b

Table 2c

Table 2d

Table 2e

Table 2f

Table 12a

Table 12b

Table 12c

Table 12d

Table 12e

Table 12f

Table 22a

Table 22b

Table 22c

Table 22d

Table 22e

Table 22f

Table 32a

Table 32b

Table 32c

Table 32d

Table 32e

Table 32f

Table 42a

Table 42b

Table 42c

Table 42d

Table 42e

Table 42f

Corporate Income Taxes All Borne by Capital Instead of 70/30 Labor/Capital

Table 3a

Table 3b

Table 3c

Table 3d

Table 3e

Table 3f

Table 13a

Table 13b

Table 13c

Table 13d

Table 13e Table 13f

Table 23a

Table 23b

Table 23c

Table 23d

Table 23e

Table 23f

Table 33a

Table 33b

Table 33c

Table 33d

Table 33e

Table 33f

Table 43a

Table 43b

Table 43c

Table 43d

Table 43e

Table 43f

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