New Yorkers: Get ready for tax increases – By George J. Marlin

Posted June 15, 2012 by streetcornerconservative
Categories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed

The following appears in the June 15-21, 2012 issue of the Long Island Business News:

If the Bush tax cuts expire at the end of this year, middle-class New Yorkers will face the greatest tax increase in their lifetimes. Contrary to all the bombastic rhetoric insisting the cuts were a windfall for the rich, the reality has been that those changes to the tax code have favored households making less than $250,000 a year.

Here’s what New Yorkers can expect in 2013 if the tax hikes go into effect: Personal income taxes for low income earners will go from 10 percent to 15 percent. The marriage penalty will return, and the child tax credit will decline 50 percent to $500 per child. Higher earners will see their 35 percent maximum rate increase to 39.6 percent.

Add in New York’s maximum rate of 8.823 percent (which has gone up 29 percent under Albany’s so-called 2011 tax reform act) and Long Island’s top earners will be paying a combined top marginal rate of 48.42 percent.

Seniors will be hard-hit if the Bush cuts expire. The top rate on Social Security benefits, which now stands at 30 percent, will increase to 34 percent. Also, the tax on dividends will rise from a flat 15 percent to a maximum rate of 43.4 percent, a 286 percent increase. Many Long Island seniors, who are barely getting by, thanks to the highest property taxes in the nation, will have no alternative but to move to low-tax states.

Other 2013 tax hikes:

  • The capital gains tax will go from 15 percent to 23.8 percent
  • The death tax estate deduction will drop from $10 million to $1 million
  • The death tax rate on estates will go from 35 percent to 55 percent
  • The employee Social Security tax will go from 4.2 percent to 6.2 percent
  • The alternative minimum tax, which presently affects 4 million households, will affect 30 million households.

And if ObamaCare survives the Supreme Court, tax increases embedded in the law will impact the bottom line of many New Yorkers in 2013. For families making more than $250,000 a year, there will be a 3.8 percent surtax on capital gains, savings account interest, dividends and rental income. These same families will also have to pay an additional 2.9 percent to 3.8 percent on their FICA rate for Medicare Part A.

Then there’s the 20 percent “medicine cabinet” tax individuals under 65 will have to pay if they use funds in their health savings accounts to purchase over-the-counter drugs.

Flexible spending accounts, which under current tax laws are unlimited as to dollar amounts, will be capped at $2,500 in 2013. This will hurt families with big medical bills and limit itemized medical deductions for seniors with high out-of-pocket medical expenses.

There will also be an excise tax imposed on the manufacturers of medical equipment. This will increase the purchase price of pacemakers and other life-saving devices.

A study released in May by the Tax Foundation reported that millions of people have fled the Empire State because it has the second highest state and local tax burden and ranks 49th in business tax climate. Over 3.4 million New Yorkers with a total income of $119 billion have emigrated between 2000 and 2009. The primary destination was Florida, which does not have a state income tax or an estate tax and has a sales tax rate of 6.62 percent – 21 percent lower than New York.

If the Bush tax cuts lapse, expect the Empire State’s tax base and skill power to continue to decline as scores of New Yorkers join caravans headed to tax-friendly states.

NY’s conservative triumph – By George J. Marlin

Posted June 14, 2012 by streetcornerconservative
Categories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed

This Op-ed piece I wrote appears in the New York Post on June 14, 2012.

Nassau Scheme a Statewide Threat – By George J. Marlin

Posted June 11, 2012 by streetcornerconservative
Categories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed

This Op-ed piece I wrote appeared in the New York Post on June 11, 2012.

Will PA Catholics Make the Difference? – By George J. Marlin

Posted May 30, 2012 by streetcornerconservative
Categories: The Catholic Thing

This article I wrote appears on The Catholic Thing web site on May 30, 2012.

New York’s public ethic: Anything goes – By George J. Marlin

Posted May 23, 2012 by streetcornerconservative
Categories: Articles/Essays/Op-Ed

The following appears in the May 18-24, 2012 issue of the Long Island Business News:

Some days I’m sorry I get out of bed. That’s how I felt on the first Saturday in May after reading a slew of government corruption stories in the morning papers.  Here’s the roundup:

  • Former state Sen. Hiram Monserrate, who is on probation for assaulting his girlfriend, was sentenced to two years in jail after pleading guilty to using $100,000 of taxpayer dollars to fund one of his campaigns for public office.
  • Former state Sen. Pedro Espada this week was convicted of stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from the Soundview Health Care Network.
  • In Brooklyn, three public administrators were charged with stealing $2.6 million. The commissioner of the Department of Public Administration said in a statement, “The investigation exposed an audacious and calculated scheme to steal money from the dead.”
  • Federal prosecutors announced they expect to indict 10 more Long Island Rail Road retirees for disability fraud. The October 2011 indictment of 11 former LIRR employees appears to have been only the tip of the iceberg. When The New York Times broke the billion-dollar bogus benefits story three years ago, it reported that “virtually every career employee of the rail road was applying and receiving disability payments giving the Long Island Rail Road a disability rate three to four times that of the average rail road.”

Let’s not forget the recent indictments of three Nassau County commanders, the Nassau County Police Department’s illicit sex inquiry, former state Sen. Carl Kruger’s sentencing to seven years in prison for bribery and honest services fraud, former state Sen. Joe Bruno’s bribery indictment and the Suffolk County grand jury report claiming former County Executive Steve Levy manipulated the Ethics Commission and used it “as a political sword to attack enemies of county officials.”

All in all, not a good spring season for taxpayers.

Historically, New York has had its share of political scandals. In the post-Civil War era, there was Boss William Tweed, (1823-1878), who made government work almost entirely for himself and a few cronies. And then there was Tammany Hall’s George Washington Plunkett, (1842-1924), who is remembered for describing the political corruption of the Roaring Twenties as honest graft. “I seen my opportunities,” he said, “and I took em.” But for the most part, these rogues were small-time crooks who stole for the sake of stealing, hoping not to get caught.

In our times, however, corruption appears to be pervasive at all levels of government for different reasons. Some people in government live under the delusion that they “sacrifice” so much for the public that they are, therefore, entitled to special perks and privileges. (The Government Services Administration Las Vegas scandal comes to mind.)

Others are narcissists who believe they are superior to the rest of society and, therefore, are not bound by the rules that govern the masses.

Then there are those who are infected by what New York Times columnist Ross Douthat calls in his new book, “Bad Religion,” pseudo-faiths that encourage one’s worst impulses instead of serving as a rebuke to avarice. “As a result,” Douthat persuasively argues, “pride becomes ‘healthy self-esteem.’ Vanity becomes ‘self-improvement,’ adultery becomes ‘following your heart,’ greed and gluttony become ‘living the American Dream.’”

The current government corruption crisis is, in my judgment, a spiritual and cultural one. Hence, it will take more than new laws to change hearts and minds. To restore civic virtue, religious and educational leaders will have to take center stage and make a concerted effort to instill in citizens of every age the canon first articulated by New York Governor Grover Cleveland that “public office is a public trust,” not a public trough for self-enrichment and self-aggrandizement.