The Department of the Treasury is a cabinet-level department responsible for promoting economic prosperity and ensuring the financial security of the United States. The department carries out a wide range of activities, such as advising the President on economic and financial issues, encouraging sustainable economic growth and fostering improved governance in financial institutions. Treasury operates and maintains systems that are critical to the nation’s financial infrastructure, such as the production of coin and currency, the disbursement of payments to the American public, revenue collection and the borrowing of funds necessary to run the federal government. The department also supports national security by implementing economic sanctions against foreign threats to the US, identifying and targeting the financial support networks of national security threats (i.e. terrorists) and improving the safeguards of the US financial system. Among the department’s many offices is the Internal Revenue Service, perhaps the best known and most hated of Treasury operations. The IRS is often the source of much debate and controversy for the department, along with lesser known offices that regulate banks and savings institutions and manage the national debt.
On September 2, 1789, Congress established a “Department of Treasury” to manage the new federal government’s finances, and created the position of Secretary of the Treasury to run the new department. President George Washington appointed Alexander Hamilton as the first Secretary of the Treasury, taking office on September 11, 1789. Hamilton had served as George Washington’s aide-de-camp during the Revolution and was a key player in the ratification of the US Constitution. Hamilton was viewed as a good choice for the treasury because of his financial and managerial acumen, which was needed to solve the problem of the new nation’s heavy war debt.
Hamilton’s first official act was to submit a report to Congress in which he laid the foundation for the nation’s financial health. He surprised many members of Congress when he insisted that the country repay its war debt of $75 million dollar-for-dollar in order to establish a sound level of credit for the fledgling federal government.
In addition to handling the fiscal responsibilities of the new government, the Treasury Department was given many other functions to take care of. For instance, the Postal Service was supervised by Treasury until 1829, and the General Land Office, which was the nucleus of the Department of the Interior, was part of Treasury from 1812 to 1849. Operations associated with business were Treasury activities until the creation of the Department of Commerce and Labor in 1903; and the functions of the Office of the Supervising Architect of the Treasury were eventually established within the General Services Administration in 1949. The oldest seagoing armed service in the United States, the Coast Guard, remained in the Department of the Treasury until its transfer to the Department of Transportation in 1967. Other marine interests were administered by Treasury: the Coast Survey, the Lighthouse Service, and the Marine Hospital Service, from which the Public Health Service, and ultimately, the Department of Health and Human Services grew. The Bureau of Narcotics was part of Treasury until its functions were relocated in the Department of Justice as today’s Drug Enforcement Agency. The Bureau of the Budget, established in Treasury in 1921, was transferred to the Executive Office of the President in 1939 and now oversees the spending of federal funds as the Office of Management and Budget.
The Civil War had a great effect on the US Treasury, due to the loss of customs revenues from the seceded Southern states. As a result, the Bureau of Internal Revenue was created in 1862 by President Abraham Lincoln and Congress to enact an income tax to pay for the war. The tax was repealed ten years later, revived in 1894, and ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court the next year. In 1913, the 16th Amendment gave Congress the authority to enact an income tax. At the time, net personal incomes above $3,000 were taxed 1% and incomes over $500,000 were subject to a 6% surtax. In 1918, income tax rose as high as 77% to finance the First World War, dropping to 24% in 1929, and rising again during the Depression. Congress introduced payroll withholding and quarterly taxes during World War II.
During the 1950s, the bureau underwent a reorganization to replace a patronage system with career, professional employees, and its name changed to the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS Restructuring and Reform Act of 1998 (PDF) further reorganized and modernized the agency, based on a private-sector model of organizing operations around customer groups. The act also significantly enhanced taxpayers’ rights with regard to dealings and debates with the agency.
Bank Regulation
In 1791 the federal government established the first Bank of the United States, a central bank founded at the urging of Secretary Hamilton. The Bank of the United States provided oversight of all banks in the country. When the Bank of the United States’ congressional charter expired in 1811, a second Bank of the United States was created in 1816 and operated until 1832. When the second Bank of the United States went out of business in 1832, state governments took over the job of supervising banks. In those days banks made loans by issuing their own currency. These bank notes were supposed to be fully backed by gold or silver reserves. It was the job of state bank examiners to visit banks and certify that institutions had enough gold or silver on hand to redeem its outstanding currency. Because this was not always done, many bank note holders found themselves stuck with worthless paper. It was sometimes difficult or impossible to detect which notes were sound and which were not, because of their staggering variety.
By 1860 more than 10,000 different bank notes circulated throughout the country. This system created financial havoc for the economy as counterfeiting became epidemic and hundreds of banks failed. Calls for a uniform national currency grew as time went on. In response, Congress passed the National Currency Act in 1863. In 1864, President Lincoln signed a revision of that law, the National Bank Act. These laws established a new system of national banks and a new Treasury Department agency headed by a Comptroller of the Currency. The comptroller’s job was to organize and supervise the new banking system through regulations and periodic examinations.
Under this new system, national banks bought US government securities, deposited them with the comptroller and received national bank notes in return. By being lent to borrowers, the notes gradually entered circulation. On the rare occasion that a national bank failed, the government sold the securities held on deposit and reimbursed the note holders.
When the Great Depression hit in 1929, it created complete turmoil for the American banking system. In the last quarter of 1931 alone, more than 1,000 US banks failed, as borrowers defaulted and bank assets declined in value. This led to scenes of panic throughout the country, with long lines of customers queuing up before dawn in hopes of withdrawing cash before the bank had no more to pay out. The banking crisis was the first order of business for President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The day after taking office, on March 5, 1933, he declared a bank holiday (PDF), closing all the country’s banks until they could be examined and either be allowed to reopen or be subjected to orderly liquidation. The bulk of this work fell to the Treasury Department’s Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).
Three months later, Congress approved the Glass-Steagall Act which created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Under the FDIC system, bank accounts were covered up to $2,500 per depositor (now $100,000). Other laws were passed regulating bank activities and competition, with the objective of limiting risks to banks and reassuring the public that banks were, and would remain, safe and sound. This lasted until the late 1980s, when savings and loans (or “thrifts”) across the country collapsed in the wake of federal deregulation. The so-called S&L crisis resulted in 747 savings and loan associations going out of business at a total of $160.1 billion. Among the many S&L’s that failed was Silverado Savings and Loan, which was run by Neil Bush, brother of President George W. Bush, and son of then-President George H. W. Bush. Another prominent Republican implicated in the scandal was Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), who was part of the “ Keating Five”—a group of lawmakers who pressured federal regulators on behalf of savings and loan mogul Charles Keating.
In 1999, the OCC was slammed in an internal report by the Treasury Department for not keeping a better watch for possible money laundering by banks. The report criticized the agency for a lack of independence when examining how well banks comply with federal laws prohibiting money laundering. The report stated that the comptroller’s '”examiners relied on bank management and/or the bank’s internal audit function instead of performing their own reviews.”
In 2008, the country was rocked by one of the largest housing crisis in US history, which threatened to bring down numerous banks. By the summer, the OCC had stepped in and closed several national banks, including First National Bank of Nevada and First Heritage Bank of Newport Beach, CA. As of July 2008, some banking experts predicted approximately 100 banks would fail by the time the crisis was over. Others, however, described such an estimate as wishful thinking, arguing the final number would be much higher.
The Department of the Treasury is responsible for implementing the US government’s fiscal policies and maintaining the overall soundness of the US economy. The Treasury Department oversees the collection of all federal taxes and accounts for all monies in the federal system. It also manages the printing or engraving of US coins and paper currency, and any borrowing performed by federal agencies (including the national debt). Another key duty is monitoring banks and savings institutions which Treasury officials audit and take action on in cases of bank failures.
Collecting Money
Internal Revenue Service: Charged with collecting taxes and enforcing tax laws, the Internal Revenue Service is popularly dubbed the “most hated” agency in the US government. The agency determines, assesses and collects revenue, including from personal and corporate income taxes, excise, estate and gift taxes, as well as employment taxes for Social Security. The IRS is the largest bureau within the Department of the Treasury—and according to the government, one of the world’s most efficient tax administrators: In 2004 the IRS collected more than $2 trillion in revenue and processed more than 224 million tax returns.
As the federal body responsible for carrying out the government’s tax policy, the agency finds itself at the center of an interminable, and usually bipartisan, debate over how America is funded. In 1998 the IRS Restructuring and Reform Act aimed at transforming the culture of the IRS and significantly enhanced taxpayers’ rights in disputes with the agency. However, many still criticize IRS Criminal Investigation (CI) operations for a perceived abuse of unchecked power. And in recent years, operational changes—including the outsourcing of collections to private agencies and the introduction of online filing—have also been the subject of debate.
Financial Management Service: FMS acts as the federal government’s money manager and bookkeeper, developing financial systems to move the government’s cash flows “efficiently, effectively and securely.” FMS provides centralized payment, collection, and reporting services for the government. FMS disburses more than $1.6 trillion to approximately 100 million individuals via Social Security and veterans’ benefits, income tax refunds and other federal payments. It collects more than $3.11 trillion per year in payments to the government through 10,000 financial institutions, with more than $2.45 trillion collected electronically. The office provides cash management guidance to federal program agencies and serves as the government’s central debt collection agency by managing the government’s delinquent debt portfolio. In doing so, FMS collects more than $3.7 billion per year in delinquent debts.
Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau: TTB is responsible for levying and collecting excise taxes on alcohol, tobacco, firearms and ammunition. By helping to develop legislation and regulations involving alcohol, tobacco, firearms and ammunition products, and ensuring that these products are labeled, advertised and marketed appropriately, the agency aims to protect consumers. TTB also conducts product analysis and ensures trade compliance with the Federal Alcohol Administration Act and the Internal Revenue Code. TTB is headquartered in Washington, DC, and maintains an office in the National Revenue Center in Cincinnati, Ohio. Staff members are analysts, chemists, investigators and auditors. Others serve as financial, legal, information management and computer specialists.
Borrowing Money
Bureau of the Public Debt: BPD is responsible for selling treasury securities such as US savings bonds to members of the public. The money made from selling these securities is, in essence, borrowed in order to finance the activities of the federal government and to account for its resulting debt. The agency pays interest to investors who buy the securities, and when it’s time to repay the loans, the agency redeems investors’ securities. Every transaction affects the outstanding national debt of the United States. Today, that debt stands at $9 trillion. It took the United States a little over 200 years to exceed the trillion dollar mark, but less than 30 years to go from $1 trillion to almost $10 trillion. The constant accumulation of debt has created considerable debate over what the country should do about it.
Federal Financing Bank: The FFB provides loans for government agencies for expenses not covered by Congressional approoriations. FFB is a government corporation that functions under the general supervision of the Secretary of the Treasury. The FFB was established to centralize and reduce the cost of federal borrowing, as well as federally-assisted borrowing from the public. The FFB deals with federal budget management issues that occur when off-budget financing floods the government securities market with offers of a variety of government-backed securities that are competing with Treasury securities. Today, the FFB has statutory authority to purchase any obligation issued, sold or guaranteed by a federal agency to ensure that fully guaranteed obligations are financed efficiently.
Creating Money
United States Mint: The US Mint is responsible for producing, selling and protecting the country’s coinage and assets. The agency makes sure the economy has an adequate volume of circulating coinage for the nation to conduct trade and commerce initiatives (in recent years, this has meant an average of between 11 and 20 billion coins annually). Additionally, the US Mint produces domestic, bullion and foreign coins; distributes coins to the Federal Reserve banks and branches; maintains physical custody and protection of the nation’s $100 billion of US gold and silver assets; produces proof, uncirculated and commemorative coins and medals for sale to the general public; designs and produces the congressional gold medals; manufactures and sells platinum, gold and silver bullion coins; and oversees production facilities in Denver, CO, Philadelphia, PA, San Francisco, CA, and West Point, NY, as well as the US Bullion Depository in Fort Knox, KY.
Bureau of Engraving and Printing: BEP is responsible for printing federal reserve notes for the Federal Reserve and producing a variety of government security documents. In addition to producing currency, BEP produces other government security documents, such as portions of US passports, materials for the Department of Homeland Security, military identification cards and Immigration and Naturalization (INS) certificates. These documents are designed and manufactured with advanced counterfeit deterrence features. BEP is also responsible for advising other federal agencies on matters of document security. The agency processes claims for the redemption of mutilated currency and uses its research and development efforts to focus on the continued use of automation in the production and counterfeit deterrence process for security documents.
Overseeing Banks and Others
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: OCC charters, regulates and supervises all national banks. It also supervises the federal branches and agencies of foreign banks. A national bank is a financial institution chartered by the OCC. National banks can usually be identified because they have the words “national” or “national association” in their titles or the letters NA or NT&SA following their titles. For example, Bank of America is a national bank (its legal name is Bank of America, NA). Other prominent banks that are national banks include Wells Fargo, Citigroup and JP Morgan Chase. National banks total more than 1,800 in the country today, representing about 23% of all insured commercial banks in the United States and holding 68% of the total assets of the banking system (or $6.6 trillion).
Office of Thrift Supervision: OTS monitors savings associations and their holding companies to ensure their solvency and compliance with consumer laws. OTS oversees savings associations, officially known as Federal Savings Banks (FSB), which have established their charters through the office. As of 2007, OTS kept watch over 831 thrifts with assets of $1.57 trillion plus 470 holding companies with US assets of $8.5 trillion. Examples of institutions that OTS monitors are Capitol One FSB, Chevy Chase Bank, Citicorp Trust Bank FSB, ING Bank FSB and Washington Mutual Bank. OTS carries out audits of Federal Savings Banks every 12-18 months, and when it finds violations, issues enforcement actions. Examiners also monitor the condition of thrifts through off-site analysis of regularly submitted financial data and regular contact with thrift personnel.
Financial Crimes Enforcement Network: FinCEN was established with the aim of sharing financial information in order to prevent money-laundering and terrorist financing. In its current form, FinCEN primarily analyzes information accumulated from the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) in combination with other government and public information and compiles it into databases made accessible to 165 federal, state and local agencies. FinCEN is a member of the international Financial Action Task force and shares information with the 106 other Financial Intelligence Units (FIUs) that form The Egmont Group. It is the only federal agency devoted solely to gathering, analyzing and disseminating information from law enforcement, intelligence and public databases. Although most Americans know nothing about FinCEN, its work is key to major criminal investigations and, in some cases, high profile busts of public officials, such as former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer.
Office of Foreign Asset Control: An agency within the Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, OFAC administers and enforces economic sanctions imposed on hostile states, nationals and organizations as determined by US foreign policy and national security. It publishes and updates the Specially Designated Nationals List, a comprehensive list of people, organizations and nations with whom it is prohibited for US citizens, residents and organizations to engage in business. The agency currently maintains a comprehensive ban requiring Americans to apply to OFAC for permission to interact commercially in any aspect with Burma (Myanmar), Iran, Sudan and Cuba. It also maintains a non-comprehensive ban in North Korea, Colombia and Iraq among other places, in where only certain industries and specific destinations are sanctioned. The difference between the two types of bans is practically negligible considering that the agency reserves the right to grant trading rights to any given applicant. Any activity conducted with any banned destination is tightly regulated and carefully monitored. Even though American nationals may send remittances to Cuba, those remittances allowed to be carried by travelers was reduced from $3,000 to $300 in 2004.
According to the USAspending.gov, the Treasury Department has spent more than $30 billion on contractors since 2000. More than 30,000 businesses and organizations have been paid by the department for goods and services, such as telecommunications services ($4.9 billion), precious metals primary forms ($3.08 billion), nonferrous base metal refinery and intermediate forms ($2.1 billion), administrative support services ($1.7 billion) and advertising services $1.1 billion).
The biggest spenders within the Treasury Department are the IRS ($12.5 billion), the United States Mint ($7.08 billion), Bureau of the Public Debt ($4.1 billion), Bureau of Engraving and Printing ($2.06 billion) and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network ($1.9 billion).
The top 10 recipients of Treasury contracts are:
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Computer Sciences Corporation $1,806,454,219
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Northrop Grumman $1,725,405,127
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Afinsa Bienes Tangibles SA $1,507,562,369
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Poongsan Corporation $1,116,939,657
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The Interpublic Group of Companies Inc $1,090,399,012
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IBM $1,069,049,355
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Crane & Co., Inc. $979,446,475
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Apptis Inc $729,647,020
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Olin Corporation $690,140,511
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Booz Allen Hamilton Inc. $680,598,200
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Thrift Regulators Shutter IndyMac, Blame Senator for Failure
In July 2008, regulators from the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) took over struggling mortgage lender IndyMac Bank, the second-largest failure ever of a US financial institution and the largest since the Great Depression. The bank’s 33 branches were closed temporarily until the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) officially reopened the bank as IndyMac Federal Bank. During the closure, customers were unable to bank by phone or Internet, causing many to panic over what would become of their deposits.
Federal authorities estimated that the takeover of IndyMac, which had $32 billion in assets, would cost the FDIC $4 billion to $8 billion. Regulators said deposits of up to $100,000 were safe and insured by the FDIC. The agency’s insurance fund has assets of about $52 billion.
OTS Director John Reich said IndyMac’s failure was a “unique” incident that did not “signal a direction for the industry as a whole.” In fact, Reich blamed the lender’s demise on a deposit run that came after Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-NY) sent a letter to regulators on June 26 questioning IndyMac's viability. That move prompted customers to withdraw $1.3 billion in the 11 business days following Schumer’s letter. Reich was not at all pleased with Schumer’s public disclosure about IndyMac.
“When a member of the United States Senate makes such a public statement, it doesn't take much to frighten the depositors of an institution,” Reich said. “It was an unprecedented act on the senator’s part and the result speaks for itself.”
Reich went on to publicly say that there was a reason why federal banking regulators like OTS don’t publish their findings of thrifts and banks. “We believe it is critically important to maintain the confidentiality of examination and supervision information. Dissemination of incomplete or erroneous information can erode public confidence, mislead depositors and investors, and cause unintended consequences, including depositor runs and panic stock trades. Rumors and innuendo cause damage to financial institutions that might not occur otherwise and these concerns drive our strict policy of privacy.”
Schumer and his defenders, in turn, accused Reich and his supporters of attacking Schumer as a way of shifting the focus away their own failure to properly regulate the IndyMac collapse.
Comptroller Questions Mortgage Data by Banks
In June 2008, the Treasury Department’s Comptroller of the Currency, John Dugan, publicly accused banks and mortgage firms of providing questionable information about the number of subprime mortgage borrowers they were helping and the rate at which homeowners were falling into foreclosure. The data was deemed crucial for regulators to gauge the severity of the housing crisis and evaluate the effectiveness of the steps lenders were taking to address the problems.
Dugan said his agency found “significant limitations with the mortgage performance data reported by other organizations and trade associations.” He added that he was referring to information provided by groups such as the Mortgage Bankers Association, which reports a foreclosure rate widely cited by regulators and the media. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency calculated that the rate was higher based on raw data it collected from nine of the country’s largest banks.
Dugan’s comments also raised questions about the accuracy of the reporting from Hope Now, an alliance of mortgage firms and banks that was formed by the Bush administration to help financially troubled holders of subprime mortgages. Leaders of Hope Now have claimed to have helped more than 1 million homeowners, but those figures were self-reported by lenders in response to the kind of surveys Dugan had faulted.
Who Bears the Cost of the US National Debt?
A March 2006 report issued by the Congressional Research Service’s Government and Finance Division outlined the controversial aspects of adding more to the national debt, saying it shifted the burden of responsibility onto future generations to not only pay back the money but to make sacrifices necessary to do so. Since growing the debt only makes it harder to pay off, including its enormous interest payments, this burden will become almost unbearable to these future generations.
IRS Refund Program Echoes NSA Wiretapping Plan
For years the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has used its Questionable Refund Program to sniff out tax cheats claiming they are owed a refund. Under this program, computer programs and data-mining techniques are used to sift through millions of tax refund requests and financial records, using the same basic approaches employed by the National Security Agency to analyze billions of phone calls, e-mails and other data. But while the security agency is looking for clues to potential terrorists, the IRS is mining its data for fraudulent tax-refund requests.
According to a government study, almost two-thirds of the refund requests identified as fraudulent through IRS data-mining are actually honest and clean. Of those returns categorized by the IRS as “conclusively fraudulent,” 46% weren't fraudulent at all. In other words, IRS data-mining falsely identifies hundreds of thousands of American taxpayers as tax frauds every year.
FinCEN as ‘Big Brother’
As concerns about fraud and terrorist financing grow, an increasing number of suspicious deposits, withdrawals and money transfers are being reported by banks and others to the federal government. Banks and credit unions, as well as currency dealers and stores that cash checks, reported a record 17.6 million transactions to the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) in 2006.
“I don’t think Americans understand that their financial transactions are being reported and routinely examined,” said Barry Steinhardt of the American Civil Liberties Union. “The government has access to untold volumes of records and can draw all sorts of conclusions about us, and many are going to be wrong.”
The FinCEN’s database now contains records of more than 100 million financial transactions going back to at least 1996. The number of suspicious activity reports soared from 413,000 in 2003 to 1 million in 2006. Federal law requires the reports to remain secret. They are written by officers at financial institutions who specialize in detecting suspicious activity, such as a series of large transactions.
FMS Not Collecting from Deadbeat Businesses
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) reported in 2005 that the Treasury Department had failed to dock 33,000 businesses that owed back taxes to the federal government totaling $3.3 billion. Under federal law, the department’s Financial Management Service (FMS) was supposed to withhold 15% from payments the government makes to companies owing taxes. Instead of collecting the three billion owed to the US treasury, FMS only collected $16 million.
Increasing National Debt Raises Controversy
In June 2003, a Congressional Research Service report to Congress presented the case for increasing the national debt in order to pay for expensive programs like the Social Security, Medicare, transportation and civil service trust funds. Supporters of the thesis argued that debt taken on by the government alleviates debt the public has to take on. This is a controversial position because many believe the federal government should not go deeper into debt when public programs may have to be cut.
The Bush Tax Cuts
During the administration of President George W. Bush, tax cuts have provoked some of the most intense debates in Washington, DC, and around the country. During Bush’s first term, the Treasury Department slashed income and other taxes—totaling $1.7 trillion—in order to stimulate economic growth. These decisions elicited cries of injustice from the political Left—who pointed out that the biggest breaks and benefits were going to the richest Americans—and the Right, who claimed the rich were being unfairly punished.
In a New York Times article, a nonpartisan Congressional study showed that families earning more than $1 million per year saw their federal taxes drop more sharply than any other group—while the tax burden has largely shifted to the middle class. Meanwhile, another study by the Tax Foundation argued that despite the reductions implemented by the Treasury Department, America’s wealthy continue to pay a disproportionate share of tax revenues.
Pro:
Supporters of the Bush administration’s tax cuts include the Tax Foundation and most Republicans. The foundation points out that as a result of the tax cuts, the federal government experienced a surge of revenue that cut the federal deficit sharply in the summer and fall of 2006. The foundation also found that the federal income tax became “markedly more progressive” between 2000 and 2004 as a result of the Bush tax cuts. A tax system is progressive, according to the foundation, if high-income people pay a larger fraction of their income in taxes than lower-income taxpayers. As reported by the foundation:
“In a purely proportional income tax system, each income group’s share of tax payments would be the same as its share of income. For example, if tax returns with AGI [adjusted gross income] between $200,000 and $500,000 accounted for 9.97% of income … then they would pay 9.97% of the taxes. And if tax returns with AGI between $40,000 and $50,000 accounted for 6.97% of income … then they would pay 6.97% of the taxes. That is, in a proportional tax system, the ratio of tax share to income share is equal to 1. Because our system is progressive, the $200,000-to-$500,000 group didn’t pay 9.97%; they paid much more, 17.89%. And the $40,000-to-$50,000 group didn’t pay 6.97%; they paid much less, 4.20%.”
The report concluded: “Because all of the major Bush tax cuts took effect in May 2003, tax year 2004 is the first to reveal their full effect. For many who predicted that these cuts only benefited “the rich,” this data showing greater progressivity will be a surprise.”
Con:
For Democrats, the Bush tax cuts have been little more than a boon to the wealthiest in America. They point to a study performed by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO)—led by a former senior economist from the Bush White House, Douglas Holtz-Eakin—that found that since 2001, President Bush’s tax cuts have shifted federal tax payments from the richest Americans to middle-class families. The CBO study found that the wealthiest 20%, whose incomes averaged $182,700 in 2001, saw their share of federal taxes drop from 64.4% of total tax payments in 2001 to 63.5% in 2007. The top 1%, earning $1.1 million, saw their share fall to 20.1% of the total, from 22.2%.
Over that same period, taxpayers with incomes from around $51,500 to around $75,600 saw their share of federal tax payments increase. Households earning around $75,600 saw their tax burden jump the most, from 18.7% of all taxes to 19.5%. The analysis echoed similar studies by think tanks and Democratic activist groups.
Background:
National Debt: Pay It, or Leave It?
Since the national debt began to grow, after the Revolutionary War, there has been contentious debate about whether it is better to have the nation remain in debt, thus keeping the burden from the people, or to pay off the national debt, and learn to live within our means. This debate continues today with strong opinions on both sides.
Pay It:
In June 2008, billionaire Ross Perot warned that the federal deficit must be addressed immediately, or the nation will suffer bankruptcy. He launched a web site to spotlight the national debt, which stands at $9.5 trillion, and the danger it poses to US currency (due to hyperinflation) if this trend continues.
Some believe that the nation is headed into another Depression, primarily because there are few well-paying jobs, little economic growth, and an astronomical debt that is added to each month. Perot points out that this could soon reach crisis proportions because of the size of the Baby Boomer generation which is beginning to retire. These people are likely to put an added burden on the Medicare and Social Security systems, which are linked to the national debt.
Lastly, many experts in favor of paying of the debt point out that more money in the economy doesn’t always lead to economic growth. Stimulus plans have historically not worked and instead caused the national debt to soar even higher.
Leave It
On the other side of the argument, those who do not want to pay down the national debt say that once the federal government has paid its debts, there is likely to be a period of “deflationary recession,” which would cause further financial problems. Instead, proponents of keeping the national debt as it is suggest focusing on increasing the country’s GDP and reducing the percentage of debt the nation carries relative to its productivity. Deficit spending like this is likely to increase the GDP, they argue, as it did in the years following World War II.
Other opponents argue that paying off the debt has to be done eventually, but why do it now? The national debt accrues interest at a rate of only 6%, so why not apply our fiscal resources on other more pressing concerns?
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Founded: 1789
Annual Budget: $13.3 billion
Employees: 107,000
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Department of the Treasury
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Geithner, Timothy
Secretary
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Like Barack Obama, Timothy F. Geithner, Obama’s choice for Secretary of the Treasury, was born in August 1961, spent part of his childhood living in Asia, and currently enjoys playing basketball.
Geithner was born in Brooklyn, New York, August 18, 1961. His father, Peter, worked as an Asian development specialist with the Ford Foundation for 28 years. As a child, Timothy lived in Zambia and Zimbabwe. He attended junior high school in India and high school in Thailand. Like his father, Geithner graduated from Dartmouth College and Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. Geithner received a B.A. from Dartmouth in 1983 with a double major in government and Asian studies, with a concentration on Chinese, and an M.A. in International Economics and East Asian Studies from Johns Hopkins University in 1985. After graduation, he went to work as a researcher for former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Kissinger Associates, the high-level and sometimes secretive lobbying firm founded by Kissinger.
Geithner joined the International Affairs division of the Department of the Treasury in 1988 as assistant financial attaché at the U.S. embassy in Japan. During the Clinton administration, he caught the attention of Larry Summers and quickly moved up the ladder at Treasury.
Geithner served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Monetary and Financial Policy (1995-1996) and as Senior Deputy Assistant Secretary for International Affairs (1996-1997).
Between 1997 and 1998 Geithner was the Department of the Treasury’s Assistant Secretary for International Affairs. His responsibilities included advising the Secretary and Deputy Secretary on international economics and monetary policy developments.
President Clinton appointed Geithner a member of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) January 16, 1998. OPIC is tasked with helping U.S. companies invest in developing countries.
On December 9, 1998, Clinton promoted Geithner to Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs, where he was responsible for developing and executing U.S. policy in the areas of international economic and financial diplomacy and international monetary policy issues, including exchange rate policy. He played key roles in negotiating aid packages for South Korea and Brazil. Geithner was the first career civil servant to be appointed under secretary for international affairs. He held the post until Clinton was replaced in the White House by George W. Bush.
Geithner joined the Council on Foreign Relations and then, in December 2001, moved on to the International Monetary Fund, where he was the director of policy development. His responsibilities included crisis management.
Geithner was named president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York on October 15, 2003. He was considered by some to be a controversial choice because he lacked market experience. Again, Geithner specialized in crisis management. He helped orchestrate the sale of Bear Stearns to JPMorgan Chase in March 2008, and, in September, the seizure of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the bailout of the insurance firm AIG, the largest government rescue of a private company in U.S. history, and the non-bailout of the investment banking firm Lehman Brothers. As New York Fed president, Geithner is also vice chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee, the Federal Reserve’s policy-setting arm.
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Paulson, Henry
Previous Secretary
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Henry M. Paulson, Jr. served as the 74th Secretary of the Treasury from June 19, 2006, until the end of the administration of George W. Bush. Paulson graduated from Dartmouth in 1968, where he majored in English, was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and an All Ivy, All East football player. He received an MBA from Harvard in 1970.
Paulson began his career in the federal government working in the Nixon administration as a staff assistant to the Assistant Secretary of Defense at the Pentagon from 1970 to 1972. He then worked as a member of the White House Domestic Council, serving as staff assistant to President Nixon from 1972 to 1973.
Paulson left for the private sector in 1974, joining the Chicago office of Goldman Sachs. He rose through the ranks holding several positions, including managing partner of the firm’s Chicago office, co-head of the firm’s investment banking division, president and chief operating officer, co-senior partner and finally chairman and CEO.
While serving as Treasury secretary, Paulson has been at the center of critical debates over the nation’s sagging economy and the corresponding mortgage crisis. In the spring of 2008, Paulson surprised many with his proposal for addressing the nation’s economic woes by offering a major overhaul of the American approach to government regulation.
One important aspect of Paulson’s plan would reorient government regulation from a “rules-based” system toward a “principles-based” approach.
As noted in the New Yorker, “In a rules-based system, lawmakers and regulators try to prescribe in great detail exactly what companies must and must not do to meet their obligations to shareholders and clients. In principles-based systems, which are more common in the United Kingdom and elsewhere in Europe, regulators worry less about dotted ‘’'s and crossed ‘t’s, and instead evaluate companies’ behavior according to broad principles. .... This approach gives companies more leeway in dealing with investors and customers—not every company needs to follow the same rules on, say, financial reporting—but it also gives regulators more leeway in judging whether a company is really acting in the best interests of shareholders and consumers.”
In addressing the housing crisis in July 2008, and in particular the federal government’s proposals for rescuing mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Paulson indicated that Washington, DC, would probably not have to bear the brunt of propping up both firms. Some observers openly questioned Paulson’s rationale that the “mere pledge of government backing for the two mortgage giants would restore market confidence” and get the two lending houses back on their feet. In fact, less than two months later, the federal government did seize both companies.
Unlike his boss, President Bush, Paulson believes global warming is a legitimate threat to the planet. In addition to his role as the nation’s top fiscal official, Paulson serves as chairman of The Nature Conservancy. His environmentalist perspective comes from having been raised as a Christian Scientist on an Illinois farm. Before college he wanted to become a forest or park ranger. He and his wife, Wendy, are both skilled birders. At their house in Illinois, they’ve raised birds, dogs, cats, raccoons, flying squirrels, lizards, snakes, mice, turtles, frogs and a tarantula.
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