I got to go.jonsimon wrote:
No, I'm talking about illegal immigrants. Don't put words in my mouth.Pug wrote:
Dude, pay attention.jonsimon wrote:
No, they pay taxes. Employers that require SS are reporting the workers, and then must withold payroll and income taxes from their pay. How is reporting the worker's income costing the business money if the taxes are taken from the workers pay? Besides, you assume everyone is immoral and experiences no negative utility from breaking the law, something easily proven to be false.
You are talking about those who at working on a green card or have applied for citizenship. These people are NOT illegal aliens. Green carders pay tax via withholding, they are in the process of becoming naturalized citizens. Green cards are hard to get for laborers...they are only issued to those who have a skill needed or a local sponsor. So, those who come in illegally cannot apply for citizenship, because they'll be deported.1) Required by law, but who is going to force them to? Who has to find out? All firms are required to require SS, so unless we're talking about construction daylaborers, the firms are going to report the taxes, and as long as the IRS is happy, the only beuracracy they have to worry about is the INS. Who's limited number of agents perform physical raids and only check for citizenship, not to see if you're paying minimum wage.Pug wrote:
Illegal aliens are undocumented, and the employer doesn't report their services as payroll expense because: 1) they would be required to pay them minimum wage or improve the working conditions to OSHA standards, 2) they would have to pay the company match on the payroll tax, 3) they would attract the INS, the IRS and receive a fine for breaking the law, 4) they lose the workforce to deportation.
2)Who will keep them from taking their end of the payroll tax out of the worker's wage? It's not like the illegal immigrant can complain to the INS and the IRS won't care as long as the taxes reported line up with sales.
3)The IRS doesn't investigate anything except the numbers. As long as tax reports match up with sales, they don't care who is employed. And the INS only does physical raids to check for citizenship, provide fraudulent proof of citizenship and they won't bug you.
4)The firms don't lose any workforce, because the government likes the tax dollars.I already knew about employers match, thanks for being stuck up. Oh, and what happens when the IRS notices the employer is somehow running their business without any labor? Or what about the huge cash transfers? Anything over 10k attracts the FBI and the NSA who now think you're dealing drugs.Pug wrote:
And, secondly, you don't know how payroll tax works...but then again most people don't. There are two components of payroll tax - the employee's portion and the employer's MATCH.
Here's how it works:
You're salary is $2,000. You get a check for $2,000 - $153 = $1,847. The company is also required to pay the match, which is $153. So, the company's payroll expenses are $2,000 + $153 = $2,153. (Based on 15.3% FICA/FUTA/Medicare in Texas, or 7.65% from the employee and 7.65% from the company). The company remits $153 + $153 = $306 to the government.
Applying this to a $10/hr minimum wage raise:
Company's payroll expense per week = $10/hr x 40 hrs = $400. Company payroll tax = $400 x 7.65% = $30.60. So total payroll expense is $430.60 per week per a LEGALIZED employee.
Converting back to hourly: $430.60 / 40 = $10.77/hr. As long as the employer pays an illegal and doesn't get caught not paying taxes, they can save some cash.Imagine if they never got caught because they reported taxes taken from their workers wages? The government never would have noticed and they'd be making greater profits.Pug wrote:
I live in South Texas. There's laborers around here that won't do work unless you pay them cash. Because then there is no "paper trail" for cashing a check. I don't know where you're from, but enforcement around here is harder then arguing "everyone will make the morally right choice", it's day to day life where I live. I know of companies which have hired a full factory shift of illegals...and got in trouble. They were forced to pay some more to the government and a fine...but how many years have they been doing this without getting caught? Did they stop? Probably not... They should get there asses handed to them in my opinion.
If illegals are willing to take risks for about $5.50/hr, don't you think $10.77/hr will mean their will be more of them?
What do illegals risk by coming here? Being sent back home so they can spend whatever they were able to send back? It's not willingness to take risks, its about oppertunity costs, silly. Way to demonstrate your grasp of economics.
BTW I'm a CPA, with a MBA in Economics.
I audit companies who pay illegals on occasion
PS you are doomed
Last edited by Pug (2006-11-10 14:58:51)