Anonymous wrote:It's very easy to pay no taxes if you don't get a W-2. You set everything up as a business, run all passive income (dividends, cap gains, rental income, etc) through the business and charge all your expenses to the business and zero everything out. That's the goal of every CPA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There should be a top tax rate for millionaires of 50 percent. And an estate tax of 75 percent on estates worth more than $50 million.
No loopholes or deductions.
The high estate tax is a little hard to accept if you have already paid your 40% income tax on it. I don't think money should be taxed twice in the same family, but if you have it hidden away free from tax and then it changes hands through death, then maybe.
Anonymous wrote:I know there are a lot of high income people on these boards so I'm curious what you think we should do about the problem of income inequality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Married couples earning more than $150k should be paying 45% or 50% on all income above $150k.
Obviously, the brackets would be adjusted accordingly, but that's a rough idea where it should be.
Yes let's kill the middle class.
It's hardly killing someone to insist that those who have been very successful in this economy pay their fair share toward those who haven't. As a progressive society, this is what we should be striving for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that wealthy do need to pay their share of taxes. I do, and it's how the free world works. Nurses, teachers, laborers are all paying taxes that cover services that we all benefit from. I was at a dinner party the other night and three of the very wealthy men there were bragging that they hadn't paid taxes in over a decade (legally through loop holes). I asked if they were embarrassed that their kids' teachers and the mail man were paying for their snow removal, road maintenance, police protection, fire department etc. They were a little stunned, and I was a little sickened by their attitude. And for what it's worth, one was a Trump supporter and the other two were liberals.
I find this hard to believe. First it's a very inappropriate and crass thing to talk about. Second this means all three men haven't had a W2 in over a decade. In other words they don't have a job and live off of investments. If they live off of investments this means they haven't sold stock in over a decade.
I swear to you this was the conversation. I am no tax expert, but this is what they said. Maybe it isn't true, but they were bragging and proud of how they managed to avoid taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think that wealthy do need to pay their share of taxes. I do, and it's how the free world works. Nurses, teachers, laborers are all paying taxes that cover services that we all benefit from. I was at a dinner party the other night and three of the very wealthy men there were bragging that they hadn't paid taxes in over a decade (legally through loop holes). I asked if they were embarrassed that their kids' teachers and the mail man were paying for their snow removal, road maintenance, police protection, fire department etc. They were a little stunned, and I was a little sickened by their attitude. And for what it's worth, one was a Trump supporter and the other two were liberals.
I find this hard to believe. First it's a very inappropriate and crass thing to talk about. Second this means all three men haven't had a W2 in over a decade. In other words they don't have a job and live off of investments. If they live off of investments this means they haven't sold stock in over a decade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Married couples earning more than $150k should be paying 45% or 50% on all income above $150k.
Obviously, the brackets would be adjusted accordingly, but that's a rough idea where it should be.
Yes let's kill the middle class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Income inequality" refers to household incomes. The biggest contributors to it are the vast increase in single-parent households at one end, and married dual-income households at the other end. The latter is further exacerbated by the tendency for potential high-earners to exclusively mate with other potential high-earners.
No the biggest problem is that the top 10-20% are the only people seeing real wage growth.
While somewhat true, that's a very minor factor compared to what I outlined. Additionally, your claim is a lot less true if you look at total compensation, including the employer share of health insurance, which has skyrocketed. You can't responsibly ignore that.
People do though. Look, the point is, HRC is promising to raise taxes on the rich and her election is basically a done deal at this point. Where do you think the top rate should be set?
Anonymous wrote:Married couples earning more than $150k should be paying 45% or 50% on all income above $150k.
Obviously, the brackets would be adjusted accordingly, but that's a rough idea where it should be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Income inequality and marginal tax rates and brackets are unrelated.
How so? The only idea people seem to have for smoothing it out is to redistribute income from upper earners to lower.
People are small minded.
Wealth redistribution through taxation does not address income inequality. High earners will still earn a lot. Low earners will not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"Income inequality" refers to household incomes. The biggest contributors to it are the vast increase in single-parent households at one end, and married dual-income households at the other end. The latter is further exacerbated by the tendency for potential high-earners to exclusively mate with other potential high-earners.
No the biggest problem is that the top 10-20% are the only people seeing real wage growth.
While somewhat true, that's a very minor factor compared to what I outlined. Additionally, your claim is a lot less true if you look at total compensation, including the employer share of health insurance, which has skyrocketed. You can't responsibly ignore that.
Anonymous wrote:I know there are a lot of high income people on these boards so I'm curious what you think we should do about the problem of income inequality.
Anonymous wrote:I think that wealthy do need to pay their share of taxes. I do, and it's how the free world works. Nurses, teachers, laborers are all paying taxes that cover services that we all benefit from. I was at a dinner party the other night and three of the very wealthy men there were bragging that they hadn't paid taxes in over a decade (legally through loop holes). I asked if they were embarrassed that their kids' teachers and the mail man were paying for their snow removal, road maintenance, police protection, fire department etc. They were a little stunned, and I was a little sickened by their attitude. And for what it's worth, one was a Trump supporter and the other two were liberals.
Anonymous wrote:I think that wealthy do need to pay their share of taxes. I do, and it's how the free world works. Nurses, teachers, laborers are all paying taxes that cover services that we all benefit from. I was at a dinner party the other night and three of the very wealthy men there were bragging that they hadn't paid taxes in over a decade (legally through loop holes). I asked if they were embarrassed that their kids' teachers and the mail man were paying for their snow removal, road maintenance, police protection, fire department etc. They were a little stunned, and I was a little sickened by their attitude. And for what it's worth, one was a Trump supporter and the other two were liberals.