Washington, Jan 23 : Americans are beginning to feel the pinch from Washington's decision
to embrace austerity measures aimed at bringing down the nation's budget
deficit.
Paychecks across the country have shrunk over the last week due
to higher federal tax rates, and workers are already cutting back on spending,
which will drag on the economy this year.
In Warren, Rhode Island, Ben
DeCastro got his first paycheck in which taxes on his wages rose by 2 percentage
points. That works out to about $30 a week.
"You sit back and do the
calculation, and that's $30 I'm not going to spend at a restaurant," said
DeCastro.
He said he worries that people hit by higher taxes will spend
less at the chain of furniture stores where he works as a marketing
manager.
Politicians in Washington made much hubbub last week about a
bipartisan deal to soften or postpone some $600 billion in scheduled tax hikes
and government spending cuts. President Barack Obama said the deal would shield
98 percent of Americans from a middle-class tax hike.
Nevertheless, for
most workers, rich and poor alike, taxes went up on December 31 as a temporary
payroll tax cut expired. That cut - a 2 percentage point reduction in a levy
that funds Social Security - was put in place two years ago to help the economy,
which was still smarting from the 2007-09 recession.
About 160 million
workers pay this tax, and the increase will cost the average worker about $700 a
year, according to the Tax Policy Center, a Washington think tank.
"It
stinks," said Beverly Renfroe, an accountant for a realty firm in Jackson,
Mississippi. "I definitely noticed a decrease."
The pain will trickle
through the economy over the next few weeks. Already, the new rate of 6.2
percent has trimmed paychecks for about half of the 200,000 employees whose
paychecks are processed by Advantage Payroll Services, a payroll firm based in
Auburn, Maine.
Economists estimate the payroll tax hike will reduce
household incomes by a collective $125 billion this year. Some households could
reduce contributions to retirement accounts or other savings, but most are also
expected to cut back on spending.
That alone could reduce economic growth
this year by about 0.6 percentage point, said Michael Feroli, an economist at
JPMorgan in New York City.
"The headwind to growth should be noticeable,"
he said.
Most mainstream economists say the government should still be
trying to stimulate the economy by lowering taxes or raising spending to help
bring down the 7.8 percent jobless rate.
Even Federal Reserve Chairman
Ben Bernanke has said Congress could consider short-term stimulus measures if
they can be coupled with a plan to tame the deficit over the long
run.
But a consensus has emerged between Congress and the White House
that the federal government should step up the pace at which it cuts the
deficit, which ballooned during the recession.
That decision is having
repercussions across the country.
In Bergenfield, New Jersey, Evelyn
Weiss Francisco has put off plans to upgrade her cell phone and thinks she might
go to fewer music concerts. A director at a public relations firm, she thinks
the higher payroll taxes will cost her about $1,000 this year.
Some
Americans will also pay higher income taxes this year. Congress and Obama let
income tax rates rise for households making more than $450,000 a year, a partial
repeal of tax cuts put in place under President George W. Bush. The wealthy will
also pay a new tax to help fund a health insurance reform passed in
2010.
These will have a smaller impact on the wider economy because they
affect fewer people. But taken together, this year's tax hikes could subtract a
full percentage point from growth, Feroli said.
Most economists see
economic growth of roughly 2 percent this year, a lackluster pace held back by
the government's austerity measures that is likely to do little to reduce
unemployment.
Failure to postpone government spending cuts due to begin
around March would slow growth more, further frustrating the economic
recovery.
The blow to the economy from the tax hikes will hurt the most
during the first half of the year as people adapt to their smaller
paychecks.
Consumer spending, which drives more than two thirds of the
economy, will likely grow at a mere 1 percent annual rate in the first quarter,
and 1.5 percent in the second, said Sven Jari Stehn, an economist at Goldman
Sachs in New York.
Nicki Hagen, who received her first reduced paycheck
on January 4 and then another, estimates the higher taxes will shrink her
paychecks by about $10 a week.
She has already started holding back from
coffee-and-bagel runs made by coworkers at the home improvement company where
she works as an office administrator in New York City.
She expects a much
bigger hit to her family's income when her husband gets his first paycheck for
2013.
The two will then sit down and figure out how to budget their
money. They might cut cable channels, or take vacation days when their daughter
is out of school to save on babysitter expenses.
"This is going to affect
our lives," she said.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Americans feel austerity's bite as payroll taxes rise
Americans feel austerity's bite as payroll taxes rise
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