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How Would the Fiscal Cliff Affect Typical Families in Each State?

4 min readBy: Nick Kasprak

Download Fiscal Fact No. 341: How Would the Fiscal Cliff Affect Typical Families in Each State?

With the election behind it, the 112th Congress has a couple of months during the lame duck session to turn its attention to pressing fiscal issues. Large changes to both taxes and spending are scheduled to take place at the end of the year unless Congress acts.[1] On 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. side, the biggest potential change is the expiration of all Bush-era and Obama tax cuts.

Additionally, the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) has yet to be patched for the current tax year, let alone next. Congress could pass a retroactive patch (which it has done in the past) that would apply to the current year as well as next year; however, if it does not, the AMT exemption level would revert to what it was twelve years ago, and certain credits (such as the Child Tax CreditA tax credit is a provision that reduces a taxpayer’s final tax bill, dollar-for-dollar. A tax credit differs from deductions and exemptions, which reduce taxable income, rather than the taxpayer’s tax bill directly. ) would no longer be allowed against AMT liability. If this were to happen, millions of middle-class taxpayers could see a substantial tax increase, which for some could be even larger than the change from the end of the Bush-era tax cuts.

Finally, the 2% temporary cut to employee-side social security 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 is also scheduled to expire at the end of this year—a potential third tax increase that would affect the vast majority of taxpayers.

To illustrate the potential impact on typical families, we have used Census and IRS data to estimate income and deductions for the median two-child family in each of the fifty states. We then ran these returns through our online tax calculator under two scenarios—2011 tax law (chosen because it is the latest year that an AMT patch was in effect), and 2013 law, assuming all Bush-era and Obama tax cuts expire and AMT remains unpatched.

Table 1. Top 10 States

State

Median Household Income for Four-Person Family (2011)

Tax Increase 2011 to 2013

Tax Increase as % of Income

Rank

New Jersey

$101,682

$6,933

6.82%

1

Maryland

$106,707

$7,194

6.74%

2

Connecticut

$100,451

$6,653

6.62%

3

Massachusetts

$101,523

$6,632

6.53%

4

New Hampshire

$97,441

$5,660

5.81%

5

North Dakota

$84,896

$4,825

5.68%

6

West Virginia

$65,403

$3,612

5.52%

7

South Dakota

$72,460

$3,997

5.52%

8

Arkansas

$55,444

$3,056

5.51%

9

Mississippi

$58,047

$3,108

5.36%

10

Table 2. Bottom 10 States

State

Median Household Income for Four-Person Family (2011)

Tax Increase 2011 to 2013

Tax Increase as % of Income

Rank

Maine

$78,310

$3,489

4.46%

41

Iowa

$76,777

$3,383

4.41%

42

Nebraska

$75,495

$3,289

4.36%

43

Delaware

$83,424

$3,622

4.34%

44

California

$74,122

$3,212

4.33%

45

Illinois

$79,138

$3,417

4.32%

46

Kansas

$74,853

$3,227

4.31%

47

Colorado

$85,027

$3,646

4.29%

48

Hawaii

$82,973

$3,453

4.16%

49

Washington

$81,582

$3,362

4.12%

50

While there are exceptions, the general pattern is median families in high-income and low-income states are more affected than those in middle-income states. Higher-income families would be disproportionately affected by the imminent AMT changes—particularly those that owe higher than average state income tax, which is deductible under the ordinary tax system but not the AMT.

At the opposite end, low-income states are disproportionately affected because three tax increases from the end of the Bush-era tax cuts—the reduction in the child tax credit, the elimination of the 10% bracket, and the reduced standard deductionThe standard deduction reduces a taxpayer’s taxable income by a set amount determined by the government. It was nearly doubled for all classes of filers by the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) as an incentive for taxpayers not to itemize deductions when filing their federal income taxes. for married filers—represent fixed increases that do not depend on income. Therefore, these increases, as a percentage of income, are largest for lower-income families.

The full data is shown below.


Table 3: Full Results – Effect of Expiration of Bush-era Tax Cuts and AMT Patch on Median Family in Each State

(Download in Excel)

Source: 2011 American Community Survey 1-year estimates

Source: Tax Foundation estimates based on IRS data[2]

Source: Tax Foundation MyTaxBurden.com Tax Policy Calculator

State

Median Household Income for Four-Person Family (2011)

Total Itemized Deductions

AMT Disallowed Deductions

AMT Allowed Deductions

Tax Increase, 2011 to 2013

From Child Tax Credit[3]

From Other Bush Tax Cuts and Extenders

From AMT

From Payroll Tax

Tax Increase as % of Income

Rank

New Jersey

$101,682

$24,257

$11,587

$12,670

$6,933

$2,000

$896

$2,004

$2,034

6.82%

1

Maryland

$106,707

$25,200

$10,475

$14,724

$7,194

$2,000

$1,427

$1,633

$2,134

6.74%

2

Connecticut

$100,451

$20,440

$9,509

$10,931

$6,653

$2,000

$1,232

$1,412

$2,009

6.62%

3

Massachusetts

$101,523

$19,326

$8,421

$10,905

$6,632

$2,000

$1,516

$1,085

$2,030

6.53%

4

New Hampshire

$97,441

$15,780

$5,225

$10,555

$5,660

$2,000

$1,446

$265

$1,949

5.81%

5

North Dakota

$84,896

$6,797**

$1,713

$5,084

$4,825

$1,423

$1,704

$0

$1,698

5.68%

6

West Virginia

$65,403

$5,042**

$1,225

$3,817

$3,612

$1,357

$947

$0

$1,308

5.52%

7

South Dakota

$72,460

$6,151**

$1,257

$4,893

$3,997

$1,000

$1,547

$0

$1,449

5.52%

8

Arkansas

$55,444

$6,675**

$1,508

$5,167

$3,056

$1,000

$947

$0

$1,109

5.51%

9

Mississippi

$58,047

$8,219**

$1,497

$6,722

$3,108

$1,000

$947

$0

$1,161

5.36%

10

Tennessee

$63,719

$7,768**

$1,410

$6,358

$3,393

$1,172

$947

$0

$1,274

5.33%

11

Alabama

$63,388

$9,109**

$1,660

$7,449

$3,350

$1,135

$947

$0

$1,268

5.29%

12

Indiana

$69,328

$8,027**

$2,131

$5,896

$3,653

$1,000

$1,266

$0

$1,387

5.27%

13

Oklahoma

$63,069

$7,742**

$1,680

$6,062

$3,309

$1,100

$947

$0

$1,261

5.25%

14

South Carolina

$60,143

$9,933**

$2,336

$7,597

$3,150

$1,000

$947

$0

$1,203

5.24%

15

Louisiana

$68,921

$8,286**

$1,353

$6,932

$3,606

$1,000

$1,227

$0

$1,378

5.23%

16

New Mexico

$60,368

$8,055**

$1,676

$6,379

$3,155

$1,000

$947

$0

$1,207

5.23%

17

Texas

$65,932

$8,985**

$1,995

$6,990

$3,441

$1,000

$1,122

$0

$1,319

5.22%

18

Florida

$63,937

$9,452**

$1,770

$7,682

$3,331

$1,000

$1,052

$0

$1,279

5.21%

19

Arizona

$59,786

$10,393*

$2,007

$8,386

$3,107

$1,000

$911

$0

$1,196

5.20%

20

Kentucky

$66,409

$9,072**

$2,820

$6,252

$3,437

$1,000

$1,109

$0

$1,328

5.18%

21

Idaho

$61,058

$10,551*

$2,406

$8,145

$3,109

$1,000

$887

$0

$1,221

5.09%

22

New York

$81,522

$16,153

$7,353

$8,800

$4,103

$1,742

$730

$0

$1,630

5.03%

23

Minnesota

$87,319

$16,130

$5,519

$10,611

$4,382

$1,906

$730

$0

$1,746

5.02%

24

Vermont

$84,011

$12,491

$4,894

$7,597

$4,190

$1,780

$730

$0

$1,680

4.99%

25

Alaska

$86,581

$9,898**

$1,932

$7,967

$4,294

$1,508

$1,054

$0

$1,732

4.96%

26

Montana

$65,695

$10,172*

$2,622

$7,550

$3,258

$1,000

$944

$0

$1,314

4.96%

27

Virginia

$89,803

$17,468

$5,109

$12,359

$4,451

$1,925

$730

$0

$1,796

4.96%

28

Nevada

$65,212

$10,422*

$1,661

$8,761

$3,211

$1,000

$907

$0

$1,304

4.92%

29

Wyoming

$77,137

$8,243**

$1,225

$7,018

$3,776

$1,000

$1,234

$0

$1,543

4.90%

30

Missouri

$70,687

$9,797**

$2,551

$7,246

$3,414

$1,000

$1,000

$0

$1,414

4.83%

31

North Carolina

$63,665

$11,275*

$3,079

$8,196

$3,052

$1,000

$779

$0

$1,273

4.79%

32

Wisconsin

$79,648

$14,406

$6,424

$7,982

$3,810

$1,487

$730

$0

$1,593

4.78%

33

Ohio

$72,764

$9,922**

$3,514

$6,408

$3,437

$1,000

$982

$0

$1,455

4.72%

34

Rhode Island $82,086 $15,779 $6,020 $9,759 $3,871 $1,499 $730 $0 $1,642 4.72% 35

Utah

$65,240

$14,163

$3,050

$11,113

$3,035

$1,000

$730

$0

$1,305

4.65%

36

Michigan

$72,366

$10,455*

$3,166

$7,289

$3,349

$1,000

$902

$0

$1,447

4.63%

37

Georgia

$65,851

$13,151

$3,250

$9,901

$3,047

$1,000

$730

$0

$1,317

4.63%

38

Oregon

$65,950

$13,686

$4,353

$9,333

$3,049

$1,000

$730

$0

$1,319

4.62%

39

Pennsylvania

$80,414

$12,250

$4,658

$7,592

$3,687

$1,349

$730

$0

$1,608

4.59%

40

Maine

$78,310

$13,016

$5,272

$7,744

$3,489

$1,193

$730

$0

$1,566

4.46%

41

Iowa

$76,777

$10,820*

$3,963

$6,857

$3,383

$1,000

$847

$0

$1,536

4.41%

42

Nebraska $75,495 $11,270* $4,074 $7,196 $3,289 $1,000 $779 $0 $1,510 4.36% 43
Delaware $83,424 $14,693 $3,934 $10,759 $3,622 $1,223 $730 $0 $1,668 4.34% 44

California

$74,122

$15,827

$3,841

$11,985

$3,212

$1,000

$730

$0

$1,482

4.33%

45

Illinois

$79,138

$13,430

$4,757

$8,673

$3,417

$1,105

$730

$0

$1,583

4.32%

46

Kansas

$74,853

$13,094

$2,782

$10,312

$3,227

$1,000

$730

$0

$1,497

4.31%

47

Colorado

$85,027

$15,900

$3,738

$12,162

$3,646

$1,216

$730

$0

$1,701

4.29%

48

Hawaii

$82,973

$15,768

$3,964

$11,804

$3,453

$1,063

$730

$0

$1,659

4.16%

49

District of Columbia

$76,230

$15,091

$4,918

$10,174

$3,255

$1,000

$730

$0

$1,525

4.27%

49

Washington

$81,582

$13,986

$3,388

$10,598

$3,362

$1,000

$730

$0

$1,632

4.12%

50

U.S. Median $74,563 $12,019 $3,156 $8,863 $3,222 $1,000 $730 $0 $1,491 4.32%

*Family would take the standard deduction in 2011
**Family would take the standard deduction in 2011 and also under 2013 current law



[1] See Tax Foundation Staff, The Fiscal Cliff: A Primer, Tax Foundation Special Report No. 204 (Nov. 8, 2012), https://taxfoundation.org/article/fiscal-cliff-primer.

[2] The IRS has state-by-state averages for many tax items, including itemized deductions. We calculated the average itemized deductionItemized deductions allow individuals to subtract designated expenses from their taxable income and can be claimed in lieu of the standard deduction. Itemized deductions include those for state and local taxes, charitable contributions, and mortgage interest. An estimated 13.7 percent of filers itemized in 2019, most being high-income taxpayers. as a percent of income for each state for the income bracket that the median family is in using 2010 state and income bracket data (the latest available), adjusted for family size using 2009 data (the latest data for which family size breakdowns are available), and applied the modified percentages to the 2011 median incomes shown in the table.

[3] Includes amounts from AMT changes that would prevent taking the credit against it. The amount purely from the Bush-era tax changes to the child tax credit is $1,000 for every state.

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