Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are new to having them you haven’t truly experienced them yet. Try being taxed an extra 4.7% on the last $3M of income. It’s no longer $2k in extra tax, but $141K in extra taxes.
Omg that sounds dreadful.
/s
You’ll never get sympathy, but it is irksome that your money, that you’ve earned, is taken at such a high rate.
Anonymous wrote:Flat tax 15% no forms , no deductions no irs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are new to having them you haven’t truly experienced them yet. Try being taxed an extra 4.7% on the last $3M of income. It’s no longer $2k in extra tax, but $141K in extra taxes.
Omg that sounds dreadful.
/s
You’ll never get sympathy, but it is irksome that your money, that you’ve earned, is taken at such a high rate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you are new to having them you haven’t truly experienced them yet. Try being taxed an extra 4.7% on the last $3M of income. It’s no longer $2k in extra tax, but $141K in extra taxes.
Omg that sounds dreadful.
/s
Anonymous wrote:If you are new to having them you haven’t truly experienced them yet. Try being taxed an extra 4.7% on the last $3M of income. It’s no longer $2k in extra tax, but $141K in extra taxes.
Anonymous wrote:I’m new to having a high enough income to owe them. 0.9% “additional Medicare tax”, 3.8% “net investment income tax” ON TOP of the main Medicare and capital gains taxes.
Come ON!!! There goes my expected $1500 refund, now I’ll owe $500. I over withheld $1k every month on my w4 last year thinking I’d finally get something back instead of owing thousands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a way of increasing taxes on the wealthy without changing the basic tax rates. Smoke and mirrors!
Actually, no. They increase taxes on the middle class, the thresholds are between 200-300k and NOT indexed to inflation. You think a family making 250k in a major city is rich? And in 10 years it’ll be even worse and affect an even greater percentage of the population.
Anonymous wrote:Two things can be true at once:
1) these small surprise taxes are annoying
2) they are fair/reasonable for the 12 percent of households with incomes above $200K, which is more than 2.5x the median income, given that we have a graduated tax system
Anonymous wrote:Flat tax 15% no forms , no deductions no irs
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a way of increasing taxes on the wealthy without changing the basic tax rates. Smoke and mirrors!
Actually, no. They increase taxes on the middle class, the thresholds are between 200-300k and NOT indexed to inflation. You think a family making 250k in a major city is rich? And in 10 years it’ll be even worse and affect an even greater percentage of the population.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two things can be true at once:
1) these small surprise taxes are annoying
2) they are fair/reasonable for the 12 percent of households with incomes above $200K, which is more than 2.5x the median income, given that we have a graduated tax system
Or 2) graduated taxes are reasonable but this amount on top of the others (both nominal rates and phaseouts of deductions and credits) is too much.
Graduated tax system hits the upper middle class but disappears for the upper class, at which point you have to fall back to the defense of "the absolute tax is greater, even though the rates in practice are regressive".
If OP is paying $2K in these additional taxes, that's because OP makes over $200K in wages and $50K in investments, or over $400K in wages and $0 in investments, or some mix of that.
OP is also over the Social Security income cap, though (which is partially adjusted for inflation), so if you look at SS as a flat social tax rate and not as a personal investment program, these new taxes essentially just remove the SS income cap for "average" high earners who earn a mix of wages and investments.
You can argue all day about what's a fair level of taxation. You have much ore trouble defending all the nitpicky nickel and diming for a thousand taxes and credits and deductions and HSA/FSA/benefits management is a rat race and a dead weight loss for the people of this country that only benefit the tax preparation and financial services industries.
It's like card fees and rebates writ large.