Lesson 1: Understanding Taxes
Lesson 2: Federal Taxes
Lesson 3: Federal Spending
Lesson 4: State & Local Taxes & Spending
Important Vocab.
100

This branch of government was given the power to tax in Article I of the Constitution.

What is Congress?

100

This is the amount of a person's gross (total) income, minus exemptions and deductions.

What is taxable income?

100

This is the largest portion of the discretionary budget. 

What is national defense?

100

Most states cannot run spending deficits like the federal government does because their laws require these.

What are balanced budgets?

100

This is an amount held back from a person's paycheck for taxes.

What is a withholding?

200

This means the more income you make, the higher the percentage of your income you will pay in taxes.

What is progressive taxation?

200

Social Security and Medicare are both funded by this tax.

What is FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act)?

200

The future of this program is in doubt because people are living longer and more people qualify to receive benefits from it than in the past.

What is Social Security?

200

The largest portion of state budgets goes to this.

What is education?

200

This is the term to describe money brought in by governments.

What is revenue?

300

Sales tax is an example of this type of tax.

What is a regressive tax?

300

This type of tax is paid on the property of a person who has died.

What is an estate tax?

300

Besides those 62 and over, these 2 groups also receive Social Security payments.

Who are the disabled and survivors?

300

The largest portion of state revenue comes from this source.

What is the federal government?

300

This is the term to describe programs like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

What are entitlements?

400

Along with simplicity and efficiency, these are the other two characteristics of a good tax. 

What are certainty and equity?

400

This type of tax applies to the manufacture of goods like alcohol and cigarettes.

What is an excise tax (sin tax also acceptable)?

400

The cost of this program, the largest source of healthcare for our poor, is funded by both the federal and state governments.

What is Medicaid?

400

The biggest source of revenue for local governments comes from these.

What are property taxes?

400

States have these to pay for investments in the future of a state like a new bridge.

What are capital budgets?

500

Goods with inelastic demand will see the burden of a tax fall on this group of people.

Who are the buyers?

500

Employers pay these taxes for their employees.

What are unemployment taxes?

500

This is the official name for the program we more commonly call Food Stamps.

What is the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program?

500

This means that nonprofit organizations like churches and charities do not have to pay taxes to the government.

What is tax exempt?

500

This is a tax on imported goods.

What is a tariff?