Egyptian peasants paying taxes
Nine years ago, I started living a more bountiful life by working less, earning less, and spending less.
I started by going to my employer’s human resources department to ask if I might take a significant pay cut. “How significant?” they asked. I said, “I’m not sure yet; maybe 75 percent?”
As you can imagine, this was not the sort of request they were used to, but they gave it their best shot. How did I come to make such a strange request? A little over nine years ago, the war on Iraq began. Along with many other people, I was horrified at the magnitude of the suffering the U.S. would inflict with its “shock and awe” campaign, and also at the increasingly blind, ignorant, and bloodthirsty war fever that dominated our country. But I also knew that as a taxpayer I was a small but vital part of the monster we were unleashing, and that no matter how much I protested, as long as I continued to pay taxes, I was — in a practical, bottom-line sense — a war supporter. I had a hard time getting to sleep at night and looking myself in the mirror in the morning. I knew I had to stop supporting the war, if only for my own peace of mind.
But how? My major financial contribution to the war was from the federal income tax which was automatically withheld from each paycheck before I even saw it. If I were to stop this withholding by filing a new W-4 form with more allowances, this would just delay the inevitable. Come April, the IRS would realize they’d been underfed and would come after me or my employer to seize the rest. I decided instead to get “under the tax line,” reasoning that the best way not to pay income tax is not to owe any to begin with. So that’s why I visited my H.R. department. But they said they couldn’t help me — such a radical pay cut might look suspicious to auditors and cause problems of some sort for the company.
So I quit my job where I’d been earning roughly $100k, and now I’m self-employed doing contract work and writing books. When I started, I didn’t know where the “tax line” was. I assumed it was somewhere in the vicinity of the “poverty line” (which didn’t sound encouraging). I found some stories about war tax resisters who use the “under the tax line” method (one among many methods of war tax resistance) and these seemed to suggest that the “tax line” was somewhere around $3,000 to $8,000 a year.
So I started thinking “hmmm... I could buy bulk rice and pick dandelions for vitamins” . . . “you can do a lot with top ramen!” . . . “maybe I could work as a fire-spotter to avoid paying rent” . . . that sort of thing. I started to resign myself to a path of deprivation, sacrifice, and renunciation in the service of my values.
There are things to be said for sacrifice in the service of values, but my path took another turn entirely.
I researched tax regulations to find out more precisely where the “tax line” is and just how much of a budget I had to work with. What I found was a great relief. Today in the United States, about 40 percent of households that file tax returns are already under the federal income tax line — that is to say, two in five of these American households pay no federal income tax. So I didn’t have to live in a cave and eat grubs and berries, all I had to do was join the income-tax-free 40 percent.
There really is no single “tax line.” The threshold is different for everyone. It's based on things like your family structure, your age, how you make your income, and what you do with your money. For me, the tax line is about $36,000 this year. By using deductions for tax-deferred retirement accounts, and for health savings accounts and health insurance — entirely legally and by-the-book — I’m able to owe no federal income tax.
To do this, I have to put about $14,000 into these retirement and health savings accounts (almost 40 percent of my income). Subtracting Social Security taxes, that leaves me about $20,000 to live on during the year. That seems like very little to many people, especially in the expensive San Francisco Bay Area where I live, but it’s more than enough for me.
For one thing, it’s a real $20,000, not a $20k salary that then gets whittled down by income tax. My yearly expenses — rent, food, transportation, health insurance, and the like — come to less than $18,000. What’s left over is a rainy-day, emergency, or vacation fund. I often use it for a south-of-the-border backpack-and-hostels style adventure. And note that I’m also saving a healthy $14,000 a year for retirement and for health expenses.
Here are some of the techniques I’ve adopted to lower my expenses:
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I cook my meals from scratch rather than eating out or eating expensive packaged food.
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I brew my own beer, because I like the good stuff (and because I want to avoid the federal excise tax on alcoholic beverages).
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I've traded English tutoring for Spanish tutoring, and web programming for training in DIY skills like meat curing and urban foraging, rather than paying for classes.
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I use the public library for research and recreational reading rather than buying books.
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I don’t own a car, but instead use public transit, bicycling, Greyhound, Amtrak, and such.
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I try to find used stuff on freecycle or craigslist rather than buying new — for instance: a pot rack, a Foreman grill, a vacuum cleaner, a back door that I could cut a cat door in without risking our security deposit, a bread machine, speakers, a living room couch, some lectures on video, a food processor and blender, and a carboy I use for brewing.
- I gravitate toward social events that highlight generosity and participation rather than commerce and spectatorship.
How has my life changed now that I’ve gone from a $100k urban playboy lifestyle to living on $20k?
When Money Magazine profiled me a few years ago for an article they put out on how to avoid taxes, they wrote that their readers wouldn’t enjoy the “ascetic lifestyle” that comes along with my technique. Well, if this is “asceticism,”asceticism is very underrated. The life I’m leading now is fuller and more enjoyable than ever. I have less anxiety and feel more integrity, and I’m genuinely living a bountiful life. By being willing to take in less income, I can work fewer hours. Those now-free hours are much more valuable to me than the money I’d been trading them for.
It seems that many things people give up to pursue their careers are more valuable than the money they gain in the trade. And many are not for sale at any price: health, youth, and the time we need to pursue our dreams, learn new skills, volunteer for good causes, strengthen relationships with our family and friends and communities, or just to read those books we’ve been meaning to get around to.
Money is at best a means to various ends. It is these ends, and not the money itself, that define abundance. While money is a useful means to some ends, it is hopeless for others and inefficient for many.
For example: I love good food. When I was making the big bucks I used to go out to eat all the time since there are so many great restaurants in the Bay Area. But for the cost of one restaurant meal I could eat fantastic food all week — if only I had the time to look up the recipes, shop for the ingredients, prepare the food, and clean up the kitchen afterwards. Now I have that time, and so I eat great food just about every day for a fraction of what I used to spend. And along the way I've learned a thing or two about the art of cooking, which helps me share good food with others.
One measure of abundance is this: What percentage of your time and energy can you devote to your passions, and what percentage are you forced to spend on priorities that contradict and oppose them? By “your passions” I don’t just mean “your selfish whims” but your values, the things you think are worthwhile and important.
If a percentage of your paycheck is being sucked up by Uncle Sam, you’re spending that percent of every working day — spending your energy and time, your life — to promote the Pentagon’s priorities and political pork projects, war and empire, bank bailouts and mass imprisonment. You can serve your values and your community much better by redirecting that time and energy in more positive directions.
What worked for me won’t work for everyone: Some people, for good reasons, have higher expenses than I do (for instance children, though they are good tax deductions, can be an expensive hobby – I don’t have kids). Not everyone has job skills that translate well to a part-time, freelance, work-from-home style job. Many people have to work full-time jobs, year-round to earn as much as I earn. Many still earn less. I don't have a one-size-fits-all strategy, but there are some lessons I learned along the way that many of us can use to make our lives more bountiful, whatever our situation.
Take stock of your own vision of a rewarding, generous life, and look closely at which components of it are best served by earning money and which components are best served in more direct ways. Look also for ways in which your career may interfere with such a life. And look at how the government, by means of the tax system, is forcing you to expend your time and energy on priorities that contradict your values. Consider the possibility that the most bountiful and generous life you could be living may be one in which you are earning and spending less but living and sharing more.
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Comments
I would like to echo Dimitris. While I understand your position and admire your grit for adjusting your life to your principles, the fact remains that taxation in general can be a great form of maintaining commons and public goods, and that taxes do pay for healthcare, safety nets, public schools, roads, parks, etc.
It is a tough spot to be in as long as the US government funds so many objectionable things (particularly unnecessary wars, the war on drugs, and related payments to privately-owned prisons). Until the government changes course, perhaps they could adopt a special section on the tax form like that for the Presidential Campaign Financing. It could ask you whether you would like any of your money to go to the Pentagon, and if so, what percentage.
Sam, that would be nice but it would threaten the politics of the powerful in many ways. Except the obvious (less financing) there is the political dispute (not sure that's the word) that comes along. The way the people view the powerful, the government and their choices can never be challenged, if the status quo is to be preserved.
So we are not going to see that, I'm afraid. Even participatory budgeting is probably only going to be implemented in "safe" cases, eg. where people just discuss about their neighbourhoods etc.
Thank you David for this great story of following your values and discovering new insights in the process.
Dimitris and Sam, you both raise excellent points about how to support the "good" things that government funds without the "bad". My personal feeling is that Dimitris is right and that having the ability to opt out of funding the Pentagon would be politically difficult to achieve. Really interesting about participatory budgeting as an alternative.
A nice thing about tax resistance is that you don't have to wait for the unlikely day when politicians start making sane spending decisions. You can do it yourself. Instead of paying taxes in the hopes that some of it will go to good causes, you can instead withhold your taxes and redirect *all* of that money to good causes. It is a sort of immediate participatory budgeting, without waiting for the government to get around to allowing it. There are some organized war tax resistance groups who operate redirection funds for this purpose (see http://www.nwtrcc.org/redirection.php for instance).
Or you can do like I do and reduce your income taxes to zero and then donate your time and energy directly to causes you find important, rather than converting that time and energy to money, losing lots of it to taxes and other inefficiencies, and then making a gift of what's left over.
David's time spent for the community is ultra efficient, no hiring, no administrative overhead, no advertising. His value doing good deeds for others, for instance home care for the sick, doesn't cost him vacation time nor lost earnings while he's able to provide a service we would all love to give but claim we can't afford.
People's spare time can become great social good though not reflected in the GDP. The GDP is actually lower while the value of services delivered is higher.
You are great like Moses against the Gold Cow...
You just act today and !thousand years ago.
Like Moses after Gold Cow 40 years before the right path again?
David, thank you for explaining how you contribute directly instead of through taxes.
Greg, you're right about these kinds of social goods not being reflected in the GDP.
I think Sam raised a good point about there being some things that government organizes and provides for the common good -- such as roads, parks, etc. -- that would be difficult to organize through voluntary service. Though I'm not asking David to solve all of these issues himself!
May I ask about how many hours you work per week? I've just graduated with a computer science degree and my goal is to be able to live simply and only work 20-30 hours per week. Or, freelance and work 2 months, take 1 month off--or something similar.
Dylan: It depends on the contract. Some years I work roughly half time for roughly half the year; other years I work roughly full time for three or four months. As someone who is just starting out in the industry, though, you might have a harder time finding clients who are willing to pay a high hourly rate and might need to work more hours until you establish a reputation.
That's great to hear. I currently work roughly full time for a startup and just signed my first contracted deal today. I'm hoping to start with a work binge to gain experience and slowly drop my hours as I raise my price.
Thanks for the great article and quick reply.
Folks reading this article and comment thread might also appreciate the book Your Money Or Your Life (http://ymoyl.wordpress.com). I'm sure you're familiar with it, David; it was a welcome read for me in the 90s after I graduated from college. Some of the advice about investing in Treasury Bonds from the original version is showing its age, but there is a revised version from 2008 that updates that section of the book in particular.
Here's a breakdown of how US federal tax is spent:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/2011-taxreceipt
It expresses nicely the tradeoff of not paying taxes. 25% is spent on the military, the highest expense, followed closely by the #2 expense, healthcare, at 24%.
But this has to be put in perspective too. We spend more on the military than any country in the world, $1.6 TRILLION, which is twice the #2 country China:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_military_expenditures
And that spending on healthcare is partly because the negative externalities of an overworked and overconsuming citizenry are so high. We also get less bang for the buck. Our spending would be a lot less if our healthcare system was structured differently.
David,
Thanks for a great article and congratulations of making this great lifestyle change. You have a lot of courage and I hope to follow in your foot steps shortly.
I'm have a little trouble understanding just how you reduced your federal income taxes all the way to zero. I can see a taxable income of around $13,000 but I don't see how you are able to get it below that level. Are there some additional deductions you are able to claim that brings your taxable income down to zero?
Also, are you pay social security and medicare at the employee rate or self-employed rate?
You can find more details about how I get to zero federal income tax at this page: http://sniggle.net/Experiment/index5.php?entry=howto
The short version is this: once I get my adjusted gross income down below $17,000 I rely on the retirement savings tax credit to eliminate any remaining income tax due on this amount.
I am charged social-security/medicare at the self-employed rate.
You have ideas, please go politics.
Only clever ants like you can save the West from
tv grasshoppers like Bush/Obama/Romney etc etc..
I love this:
One measure of abundance is this: What percentage of your time and energy can you devote to your passions, and what percentage are you forced to spend on priorities that contradict and oppose them? By “your passions” I don’t just mean “your selfish whims” but your values, the things you think are worthwhile and important.
Timely read, as, sick of constant existential crises over money vs. time vs. job-angst, I just settled on a similar scheme. Not based on taxes, but more on: life's too short to not do something meaningful. Working on ways to simplify and live on less to support the idea of doing things that are important to me...
Thanks for sharing this!
- annie
I really appreciate David Gross' article and thoughtfulness in sharing this around Tax Day. One aspect that was not mentioned is that there can be a legal alternative to "Paying for War While Praying for Peace." The National Campaign for a Peace Tax Fund works to pass the Religious Freedom Peace Tax Fund Act. Under this bill (HR 1191), taxpayers would have the option of registering with the IRS as conscientious objectors to war. Then the taxes of those individuals would be deposited into the Religious Freedom Peace Tax Fund "to be used for nonmilitary purposes." This would be similar to the status of those who register as conscientious objectors with the Selective Service System or as most of us call it, the "draft." Each 1040 Form would need a check box for those of us who are ethically, morally or religiously opposed to participation in war. Congressman John Lewis of Georgia considers this the most important bill he introduces into Congress each session. You can learn more by going to the website www.peacetaxfund.org. It is the only legal alternative that is presently before the Congress.
Income Tax is better for country infrastructure growth not for politician. There is no problem in our constitution but problem in constitution makers so my idea is taxable income donate in NGO (Non Profitable organization) which is good for society . If my tax is used in country growth , I request to all please fill tax and make country's economy stronger .
Repair vs Capitalization- - Tax Firm Pasadena, CA
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That's an interesting endeavour. My only concern is that taxes go to good causes too. I guess in the USA there is a little bit of public sector (schools, hospitals) that could benefit from your taxes. But I understand your stategy.
I am also concerned about paying taxes because I don't trust the government (Greece) to create the budget and implement it. I know there is a lot of corruption in the state and a lot of money is getting wasted or used in ways I don't support (like you do).
I think it would be ideal if people could donate part of their income instead of paying taxes but that creates the problem that some parts of the public sector might be left without funding. The idea is that the state is supposed to distribute the wealth to everybody that needs it, but unfortunately that doesn't work.
Perhaps participatory budgeting is the best solution and we should try to achieve that.