cover of episode Breaking Down "No Tax On Tips"

Breaking Down "No Tax On Tips"

2024/9/2
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This chapter introduces the proposal of eliminating taxes on tips and the opposing views from economists and tax experts. It highlights concerns about unfairness to other workers, the potential for gaming the system, and the existing fact that many tipped workers already don't pay federal income taxes due to low earnings.
  • Economists and tax experts oppose eliminating taxes on tips.
  • Concerns exist regarding unfairness, system gaming, and the fact that many tipped workers already don't pay federal income tax.
  • Potential issues include defining eligible occupations and preventing high earners from exploiting the system.

Shownotes Transcript

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Hey there, it's the NPR Politics Podcast. I'm Deepa Shivaram. I cover the White House. And on this Labor Day, we want to take a look at a labor proposal that's getting a lot of attention. Our friends at The Indicator from Planet Money took a look at the idea of eliminating taxes for the tips that some workers receive. People like restaurant servers, baristas, hairdressers. And today we want to bring you their reporting. Here's Waylon Wong and Darian Woods.

We've heard a lot over the last several weeks about getting rid of taxes on tips, notably from Donald Trump. It's called no tax on tips. No tax on tips.

And then Kamala Harris in her Nevada speech about a week and a half ago. And eliminate taxes on tips for service and hospitality workers. But you know who doesn't agree with this policy? Economists. Yes, economists and tax experts like Howard Gleckman. It's a terrible idea.

Howard is a senior fellow at the Urban Brookings Tax Policy Center. And Waylon, shall we just go through some of the reasons why most economists hate this idea? Yes, let us count the ways. All right. Unfairness, for one thing. Like, why should a waiter get part of their income tax-free, but the dishwasher in the back doesn't? Nor does, say, a cashier at Target.

Also, more than one in three tipped workers already don't pay federal income taxes. They don't earn enough. People could also game the system. What's stopping a corporate lawyer from taking their fees as a gratuity? Yeah, maybe a tip jar when you go in for your merger or acquisition.

It might be a pretty big job. It's not like a take a penny, leave a penny situation. You know, that is a big one. So given the concern of people redefining their income as tips, how could this policy be written in a way that minimizes the fallout? ♪

This is The Indicator from Planet Money. I'm Darren Woods. And I'm Waylon Wong. Today on the show, how to put in place guardrails for a policy that many economists believe is likely to go off the rails.

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Shannon Lee is an esthetician, you know, skincare, beauty treatments. And she says she got into it because of her own acne. And she says when her customers come in with it, it is quite satisfying to treat. I think acne is like my favorite thing ever. You love acne? I love acne.

I bet Shannon and I both enjoy watching pimple popping content on social media. No comment. Look, I'm not going to yuck your yum, as they say. It's very compelling. It's incredibly disgusting. I can't look at it. Now, Shannon has her own business in New York, and we spoke there with a treatment table between us.

Shannon says the mid-range for estheticians in New York is about $22 an hour, plus commissions and tips. Her employees earn about a third of their income through tips. We're talking $30 an hour or even more. Shannon gets tips too. So this proposal to make those tips tax-free sounds almost too good to be true. If you were to not have to pay taxes on those tips, would that be a good thing for you? Am I allowed to say yes?

You're allowed to. Absolutely, this would help out. Shannon thinks other workers and business owners might be tempted to change their fee schedules so that more income comes in as tips. I think it will change the people's perspective on how they work.

structure everything. That is one of the big concerns from the tax experts, like Howard Gleckman from the Urban Brookings Tax Policy Center. When you tax income in different ways, people are going to work very hard to characterize their income in the lower tax form. Howard points to plenty of historical examples where a regulation or lower taxes for some types of income have meant that people changed how they get compensated. We all now take employer-sponsored health insurance for granted.

Everybody, you have a job, you expect to get health insurance through your job. That didn't exist before World War II. Yeah, the Stabilization Act of 1942 froze wages and benefits. It was part of a wartime effort to control inflation. But it had a big exception. Pension plans and insurance could grow. So they did. It led to these big, all-encompassing health insurance plans being a very normal part of American compensation in a job.

This very American health care system is a historical accident fueled in part by people seeing loopholes and using them. Another example that really highlights what happens when you tax two different forms of compensation differently is something big shot financial people know really well. Hedge fund managers, private equity partners, they have learned that getting paid a salary doesn't work out the best for them tax wise. If you're somebody, particularly somebody who's making a lot of money,

And you can turn your income into capital gains. You're going to be paying a maximum rate of 20%.

If it's ordinary income or wage income, you're going to be paying a 37%. So there's a big incentive to change the way your income is categorized. Some call this the carried interest loophole. It's when in lieu of some salary, these finance people get a share of the profits from the deals the company's worked on. That's then taxed at that lower capital gains rate as it's considered a profit on selling an asset.

The end result of all these loopholes and carve-outs means that the tax code can be gamed. Laws intended to benefit one group might actually benefit another. And the government finds it harder to raise revenue. So he posed the challenge to Howard. If the elimination of taxes on tips had to be made, how could the unintended consequences be minimized? What kind of guardrails could be put in place to reduce gaming of the system? Like that hypothetical corporate lawyer with a tip jar.

So this starts getting really complicated. I mean, you certainly could put in income limits. Capping the income at which you can get tax-free tips is something that Kamala Harris said she would do. So that would stop those wealthy white-collar workers from claiming their income as tips. Donald Trump's proposal doesn't have that detail. You certainly could try to define those occupations differently.

that are eligible for the tax exempt tips and those that aren't. Again, this is something that Harris has included in her proposal to only allow this for hospitality and service workers. Trump, again, hasn't specified this. That said, Howard is skeptical that this would solve the problem. He says that people like freelancers can redefine what industry they're in. They will gain the system. They'll change the nature of their work just enough so it fits a definition.

and allows them to get the income. Howard says this behavior could even boil over into outright fraud. And the root of this, he says, comes down to a broader problem with the IRS. You can put down anything.

The IRS doesn't have the resources to ID you to determine what your occupation really is. So it sounds like boosting IRS resources might be part of your big policy proposal. Oh, I'm a fan. I think it's a great idea. Ultimately, though, Howard was just kind of playing along with us. The bottom line really is, you know, it's unworkable. You can't. I mean, I'm not going to sit here and try to fix something that shouldn't happen and shouldn't actually be fixed. Well, I appreciate you being game at least enough to think about the hypothetical.

I try, but I'm not going to help them out on this. They're making this mess. They've got to get out of it themselves. What Howard thinks would really support tipped workers would be an increase in the federal tipped minimum wage, which is currently at $2.13 an hour. Yeah, that surprises a lot of people. I mean, this varies state by state, of course, but for some states, that is the minimum wage for tipped workers. Yeah, I mean, $2.13, that's like barely going to buy...

buy you a fountain drink at the restaurant you're working at, you know? Yeah. And so Howard hopes that maybe bringing up that tipped minimum wage could push back against this entire system of compensating people through the whims of their customers. When you go to Europe and there's less pressure to tip, how do you feel? I feel great. I actually, I'm one of those people who really does resist the whole tipping culture.

Yeah, I bet Howard hates those pop-up screens that are everywhere asking for tips left and right. Yes. And Kamala Harris's proposal is paired with an increase in the minimum wage, but it's unclear yet whether that's an increase in the tipped minimum wage. Trump hasn't advocated for an increase in the minimum wage.

And so just stepping back, do we think that removing taxes on tips is actually likely to happen? You know, it's a bipartisan issue. Politicians on both sides of the aisle support it. You've got Republican Senator Ted Cruz who introduced a bill, the No Tax on Tips Act, earlier this summer. Democratic Representative Stephen Horsford said last week he's going to introduce another bill. This one's going to be called the Tipped Income Protection and Support Act.

So there's a real possibility it might happen. This might also have something to do with Nevada being a battleground state. It's a big state for tipped workers. You've got one in five workers there working in leisure and hospitality. Oh, wow. Yeah, so no doubt. It may not please the Howard Glickmans of this world, but it's good politics.

That was Darian Woods and Wei-Lin Wong from The Indicator from Planet Money. We'll be back in your feeds tomorrow with the latest news. I'm Deepa Shivaram. I cover the White House. And thanks for listening to the NPR Politics Podcast.

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