Mad at Taxes

Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner is famed for his obsessive attention to period detail. (One episode featured junior executive Pete Campbell displaying a spectacularly ugly "chip and dip" platter he received as a wedding present — the very same chip and dip that Weiner's own parents received for their wedding back in 1959.) So, fashion mavens predictably ooh'ed and ahh'ed over the period costumes, which have inspired today's Banana Republic to introduce an entire collection. Interior design aficianados ooh'ed and ahh'ed over Don and his new bride Megan's stylish Upper East Side penthouse, with its white carpeting, sunken living room, and broad terrace. But tax professionals cheered loudest of all when partner Roger Sterling bribed media buyer Harry Crane $1,100 to give up his office for rising star Campbell. "That's more than you make in a month," Sterling whee dled, "after tax!"

Prices from 1966 seem comically quaint today. A gallon of gas cost just 32 cents. A dozen eggs cost 60 cents. Postage stamps cost a nickel. But there was nothing comical or quaint about taxes. Rates in 1966 started at 14% on income over $1,000 (roughly $7,000 in today's economy), and rose to 70% on income over $200,000. 70% is a lot compared to today's 35% maximum — but 70% was actually a big step down from the 91% top rate that Don and his colleagues faced just three years earlier in 1963. One small consolation — Don's was quite a bit simpler. However, the "Expense Account Information" section at the bottom of page two includes an intimidating box to check — and separate instructions to follow — "if you had an expense account or charged expenses to your employer."

If we had been practicing back in 1966, we would have looked just as good wearing the silhouettes of 1960s style. But Don Draper would have appreciated us more for the way we cut his taxes. There's no need to get mad at the IRS if you have a proactive plan. And there's no pesky two-drink minimum, either!