Anonymous wrote:Rates are unrealistically low. They need to be graduated up greatly. If you're making under 50K, your rate should be 5%. But it should scale upwards quickly from there. After 75K, it should be 90-95%. At 250K, it should be 99%. Likewise for unearned income, which should also be 99%. And I'd also do away with probate completely, with all of an estate up as taxes unless survivors can show cause as to why they should get those assets.
That will even things out and get rid of the huge disparity of wealth in this country, which is really what is driving all the problems in this country.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eliminate ALL deductions and exemptions. Institute a flat % tax.
No, this would be patently unfair.
If everyone is paying the exact same %, how is that unfair? Seems to me it's the very definition of 'fair'.
No, it's "equal." You're conflating the two. "Equal" and "fair" are not synonyms. Our tax code is progressive for a reason.
If I earn $50,000 and the flat tax is, say, 15%, I have to pay $7,500 (plus payroll taxes, but I'll leave that out for now), so I'm left with $42,500. But if someone earns $1 billion, he pays $150 million and is left with $850 million.
I know, I know, you think that's fair. The problem is -- the rate cannot be 15% in order to be revenue neutral. It has to be closer to 30%. So, now I'm left with $35,000 (plus payroll taxes). The billionaire is still left with $700 million.
I don't think that is fair. He has a greater ability to pay than I do without affecting quality of life. That's the issue.
OK, you simply want the rich to pay their "fair share". Got it.
Life isn't fair. But our forefathers stated "all men are created equal". We should be taxed as such.
Anonymous wrote:Progressive flat tax. ALL income - salary, interest, inheritance, dividends, whatever - is taxed at the same rate.
Philosophically, you can think about it as everyone is taxed the same on any given dollar. The first 50K or so that someone makes is really needed just to live. So with that first 50K, we shouldn't expect them to contribute further. The next 100K or so that someone makes is still needed for a lot of basics of modern life, but it's time to start contributing. After the following 250K or so, time to contribute even more, and so on.
First $50,000 you make, is 0%
Next $100,000 is taxed at 15%
Next 250,000 is taxed at 30%
Next 1 million is taxed at 35%
Next 10 million is taxed at 40%
Of course, you can easily do the math and come up with a tax table that is just one % at a given income level, but the underlying philosophy is to treat everyone the same with each specific dollar that earn. So Mr. McMansion is still paying 0% on the first 50K he earns.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eliminate ALL deductions and exemptions. Institute a flat % tax.
Flat tax should have the first 25k or whatever exempted to allow the working poor to have a chance.
Flat tax would need to cover all current taxes: estate, dividends, etc.
No. Flat tax needs to be flat and apply to everyone equally. Don't like that the poor are taxed the same as the rich, percentagewise on ALL income? Then cut spending.
Equal protection under the law.
Anonymous wrote:Rates are unrealistically low. They need to be graduated up greatly. If you're making under 50K, your rate should be 5%. But it should scale upwards quickly from there. After 75K, it should be 90-95%. At 250K, it should be 99%. Likewise for unearned income, which should also be 99%. And I'd also do away with probate completely, with all of an estate up as taxes unless survivors can show cause as to why they should get those assets.
That will even things out and get rid of the huge disparity of wealth in this country, which is really what is driving all the problems in this country.
Anonymous wrote:Eliminate all deductions and exemptions.
0% tax rate for incomes below $50,000
10% for incomes between $50-$150,000 with no tax on first $50
20% tax on all income above $150,000
30% tax on all income above $1,000,000
20% corporate tax rate
No deduction for interest on debt
Anonymous wrote:Eliminate all deductions and exemptions.
0% tax rate for incomes below $50,000
10% for incomes between $50-$150,000 with no tax on first $50
20% tax on all income above $150,000
30% tax on all income above $1,000,000
20% corporate tax rate
No deduction for interest on debt
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rates are unrealistically low. They need to be graduated up greatly. If you're making under 50K, your rate should be 5%. But it should scale upwards quickly from there. After 75K, it should be 90-95%. At 250K, it should be 99%. Likewise for unearned income, which should also be 99%. And I'd also do away with probate completely, with all of an estate up as taxes unless survivors can show cause as to why they should get those assets.
That will even things out and get rid of the huge disparity of wealth in this country, which is really what is driving all the problems in this country.
So why work hard? What do you want? The USSR and soviet block apt buildings?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eliminate ALL deductions and exemptions. Institute a flat % tax.
Flat tax should have the first 25k or whatever exempted to allow the working poor to have a chance.
Flat tax would need to cover all current taxes: estate, dividends, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Rates are unrealistically low. They need to be graduated up greatly. If you're making under 50K, your rate should be 5%. But it should scale upwards quickly from there. After 75K, it should be 90-95%. At 250K, it should be 99%. Likewise for unearned income, which should also be 99%. And I'd also do away with probate completely, with all of an estate up as taxes unless survivors can show cause as to why they should get those assets.
That will even things out and get rid of the huge disparity of wealth in this country, which is really what is driving all the problems in this country.
Anonymous wrote:What is income?
The House proposal wants to tax grad school tuition waivers. If you are getting your PhD “for free”, you would actually have to pay tax on it as if they paid you in cash the value of the tuition.
The House proposal wants to eliminate the estate tax. My mother inherited a thousand shares of Exxon at about $20 a share. It’s at $100 now. When she dies, I would inherit those at the $100 value—if I sold them at $105, the only tax would be on the $5 gain, not the $85.
So I ask again—before we get to rates and deductions and what not—what is the income we are even taxing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eliminate ALL deductions and exemptions. Institute a flat % tax.
No, this would be patently unfair.
If everyone is paying the exact same %, how is that unfair? Seems to me it's the very definition of 'fair'.
No, it's "equal." You're conflating the two. "Equal" and "fair" are not synonyms. Our tax code is progressive for a reason.
If I earn $50,000 and the flat tax is, say, 15%, I have to pay $7,500 (plus payroll taxes, but I'll leave that out for now), so I'm left with $42,500. But if someone earns $1 billion, he pays $150 million and is left with $850 million.
I know, I know, you think that's fair. The problem is -- the rate cannot be 15% in order to be revenue neutral. It has to be closer to 30%. So, now I'm left with $35,000 (plus payroll taxes). The billionaire is still left with $700 million.
I don't think that is fair. He has a greater ability to pay than I do without affecting quality of life. That's the issue.
OK, you simply want the rich to pay their "fair share". Got it.
Life isn't fair. But our forefathers stated "all men are created equal". We should be taxed as such.