QUESTION IMAGE
Question
article: what are income taxes?
article: what is a payroll tax? (stop after \unemployment taxes\)
two of the biggest taxes we pay show up on our paystubs: income taxes and payroll taxes. review the two articles and answer the question below.
- identify whether each of the following statements describes income taxes (i) or payroll taxes (p) or both. circle or highlight your answers.
| statement | income or payroll taxes? |
|---|---|
| b. this tax is used to fund medicare and social security programs | i p |
| c. this tax goes into the general fund of the u.s. treasury, so it is used to fund many different government programs. | i p |
| d. most employees pay this tax at a standard rate of 7.65% on their wages, salaries, and tips. | i p |
| e. this tax uses marginal tax rates. your tax bracket depends on your income. | i p |
| f. this type of tax is always charged by the federal government, but an additional tax can also be charged by the state or local municipality. | i p |
To solve this, we analyze each statement based on the definitions of income taxes (I) and payroll taxes (P):
Statement a
Income taxes are paid on various earnings (wages, capital gains, royalties, etc.). Payroll taxes are specific to wages/salaries. So this is I.
Statement b
Payroll taxes fund Medicare and Social Security. Income taxes fund general government programs. So this is P.
Statement c
Income taxes go into the U.S. Treasury’s general fund. Payroll taxes fund specific programs (Medicare/Social Security). So this is I.
Statement d
Payroll taxes have a standard rate (7.65% for FICA: Social Security + Medicare) on wages/tips. Income taxes use marginal rates. So this is P.
Statement e
Income taxes use marginal tax rates (tax bracket based on income). Payroll taxes have flat rates. So this is I.
Statement f
Income taxes are federal, and states/local can also impose them. Payroll taxes are primarily federal (with some state unemployment taxes, but the “always federal” + state/local addition fits income taxes). So this is I.
Final Answers (circle/highlight):
a. \(\boldsymbol{I}\) (leave P unmarked)
b. \(\boldsymbol{P}\) (leave I unmarked)
c. \(\boldsymbol{I}\) (leave P unmarked)
d. \(\boldsymbol{P}\) (leave I unmarked)
e. \(\boldsymbol{I}\) (leave P unmarked)
f. \(\boldsymbol{I}\) (leave P unmarked)
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
To solve this, we analyze each statement based on the definitions of income taxes (I) and payroll taxes (P):
Statement a
Income taxes are paid on various earnings (wages, capital gains, royalties, etc.). Payroll taxes are specific to wages/salaries. So this is I.
Statement b
Payroll taxes fund Medicare and Social Security. Income taxes fund general government programs. So this is P.
Statement c
Income taxes go into the U.S. Treasury’s general fund. Payroll taxes fund specific programs (Medicare/Social Security). So this is I.
Statement d
Payroll taxes have a standard rate (7.65% for FICA: Social Security + Medicare) on wages/tips. Income taxes use marginal rates. So this is P.
Statement e
Income taxes use marginal tax rates (tax bracket based on income). Payroll taxes have flat rates. So this is I.
Statement f
Income taxes are federal, and states/local can also impose them. Payroll taxes are primarily federal (with some state unemployment taxes, but the “always federal” + state/local addition fits income taxes). So this is I.
Final Answers (circle/highlight):
a. \(\boldsymbol{I}\) (leave P unmarked)
b. \(\boldsymbol{P}\) (leave I unmarked)
c. \(\boldsymbol{I}\) (leave P unmarked)
d. \(\boldsymbol{P}\) (leave I unmarked)
e. \(\boldsymbol{I}\) (leave P unmarked)
f. \(\boldsymbol{I}\) (leave P unmarked)