Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
The bolded part is not true and discredits the whole rest of your post. Sure half the population pays no federal income tax, but there are lots and lots of other taxes, the working poor pay far more proportionately than the rentier class.
I know....I know. I was going to be specific and say federal income tax (since I know people like you jump in about the sales tax and payroll), but this thread is talking about tax reform as it relates to federal income tax only, so it should have been obvious. If you don't like the fact that I mentioned that half the people pay no fed income tax and choose to disregard the rest of my post, so be it.
I think part of the problem IS that half the peole pay nothing. Really low income get exused, but the lower-middle (say a family earning $60k) should pay something. We need an AMT on the low end, too, so that anyone with a gross income over $40k pays at least a token amount. More people need to have skin in the game.
By your logic every tax should be extended so more people have "skin in the game." Apply to everyone the estate tax, corporate taxes, property taxes, dog tax, whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's seems like the talk about tax reform going on is not about fixing what's really wrong with the tax code so much as redistributing the tax burden. If you had the chance to fix the tax code, what would you fix?
Here's my list:
Treat carried interest as ordinary income.
Treat interest and dividends as ordinary income.
Index capital gains to inflation and treat as ordinary income.
Eliminate the mortgage interest deduction for second homes.
What else?
Eliminate mortgage interest deduction for amount over [nominally $500k, can be tweaked as a starting point, and then should be indexed appropriately] on primary home
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
The bolded part is not true and discredits the whole rest of your post. Sure half the population pays no federal income tax, but there are lots and lots of other taxes, the working poor pay far more proportionately than the rentier class.
I know....I know. I was going to be specific and say federal income tax (since I know people like you jump in about the sales tax and payroll), but this thread is talking about tax reform as it relates to federal income tax only, so it should have been obvious. If you don't like the fact that I mentioned that half the people pay no fed income tax and choose to disregard the rest of my post, so be it.
I think part of the problem IS that half the peole pay nothing. Really low income get exused, but the lower-middle (say a family earning $60k) should pay something. We need an AMT on the low end, too, so that anyone with a gross income over $40k pays at least a token amount. More people need to have skin in the game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
You can't get blood from a stone.
The people that you think "pay no taxes" are living paycheck to paycheck and can barely afford their living expenses, let alone additional taxes. We should have appropriate incentivization either through tax penalties or other mechanisms to get employers to pay living wages. And THEN you can think about collecting more taxes from those people you think are deadbeats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No deductions or exemptions.
Progressive tax on all earnings (including investments, rental income, anything). But reasonably progressive. Not something like 90% of all income over 500K----something that continues to increase at 1 million, 10 million, etc but taps
out on 50-60% or thereabouts.
You're contradicting yourself. We make the tax code progressive largely through the use of deductions and exemptions. You're making a case for marginal rates starting with the first dollar of income, but that's not "progressive."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The government has basically zero reason to incentivize passing wealth onto one's heirs. There might be corner cases where a parent dies while a child is a minor and so unable to work, but that's about it. I stand to inherit a decent sum, so I'm not against inheritances. But the government has no reason to create extra incentives for my parents to build up wealth just to pass it to me.
Incentivize saving enough to take care of yourself after retirement, sure, I can see that. But saving more than you'll need in your lifetime, nope.
Passing on so the next generation is in a better place has been a tenet of the US economic dream. That shouldn't be curtailed, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
Anonymous wrote:It's seems like the talk about tax reform going on is not about fixing what's really wrong with the tax code so much as redistributing the tax burden. If you had the chance to fix the tax code, what would you fix?
Here's my list:
Treat carried interest as ordinary income.
Treat interest and dividends as ordinary income.
Index capital gains to inflation and treat as ordinary income.
Eliminate the mortgage interest deduction for second homes.
What else?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
The bolded part is not true and discredits the whole rest of your post. Sure half the population pays no federal income tax, but there are lots and lots of other taxes, the working poor pay far more proportionately than the rentier class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
The bolded part is not true and discredits the whole rest of your post. Sure half the population pays no federal income tax, but there are lots and lots of other taxes, the working poor pay far more proportionately than the rentier class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.
Agree. So true.
In fact, I think the rates are low enough. We have half the country paying no tax and the moderate earners on the cusp paying small amounts. The rich have dropped from the 70% rate to the 30s, as you say, and that's low enough. (You sound well-informed, so I'm sure you know that the top rate was 90% before JFK lowered it.)
The only rate that needs to be reduced is the corporate rate. Other countries have lowered theirs while ours.has remained in place, and it has driven corporations out of the country in order to take advantage of loopholes. Lower the rate to a competitive 20%, and include a tax repatriation holiday of 10%, and watch the jobs flow back....the market roar even either.....consumer spending pick up....and the GNP approach 4%.
Conversely, if the Dems block or delay corporate tax reform, expect a 15% to 20% drop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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?
Agree. The first poster, who wants to tax $75k incomes at 90%+, is a pure socialist. Take virtually all income from middle-class earners (leaving them crumbs) to give to lower-class people who earn nothing or very little. Pretty soon, everyone is living an equally low-level lifestyle.
One reason this is so hard to discuss is people are stupid and don't understand the terms they use. The 90% poster is not a socialist. A confiscatory tax rate is not socialism. Socialism means that governments own the means of production. George W. Bush engaged in socialism when he nationalized the banks in the bailout -- that was the last time we had socialism in this country. But that had nothing to do with tax rates.
It doesn't matter if the label is wrong - it's the underlying concept we are discussing (massive income redistribution), and the objections remain the same. The "socialist" poster wants to take virtually all income from even moderately successful people ($75k) in order to provide more free stuff to lower-income people so that all people, high school dropouts and college-educated professionals, live the same "sustainable" albeit modest lifestyle. What got my ire up is that he calls anyone who disagrees with this confiscatory tax rate a "criminal."
As I said upthread, I am scared to death that people like the deluded "socialist" poster will be elected (there are no shortage of "gimme" and/or similarly deluded voters), and our country will go the way of Greece.
pp here. I agree that a confiscatory tax policy is stupid. however, I will also say it was a lot easier to do tax "reform" in the 1980s because the rates were a lot higher before. it's easy to bring down rates from the 70s and 80s to the 30s by broadening the base than it is to lower rates already in the 30s. ini my view, the only real way to achieve tax "reform" would be to create a VAT or something and lower income tax rates even further.