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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
vy65
I don't think that's as clear as it seems. He synonymizes parasites as those who harm society: "It is not unthinkable that a society might attain such a consciousness of power that it could allow itself the noblest luxury possible to it-letting those who harm it go unpunished. "What are my parasites to me?" it might say."
Given that, you can argue that either group is parasitic because they do society harm - albeit in different ways.
Not sure how familiar you are with Nietzsche, but he tends to use the term parasite as one who doesn't add anything to society, or one who is a drain on resources, not one who harms society actively through criminal intent. (For instance, there's a famous quote where he likens an invalid to a parasite.)
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
RandomGuy
No clue here. Apparently no one else has one either.....
I see another argument being thrown around about taxing the rich, and that's the notion that over taxation would lead to eventual stagnation due to the rich cutting their spending (shopping, creating jobs, etc). I heard it somewhere but don't remember.
I'm not an economic stalwart, perhaps you can shed some light on this?
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Agloco
No clue here. Apparently no one else has one either.....
I see another argument being thrown around about taxing the rich, and that's the notion that over taxation would lead to eventual stagnation due to the rich cutting their spending (shopping, creating jobs, etc). I heard it somewhere but don't remember.
I'm not an economic stalwart, perhaps you can shed some light on this?
But the rich don't spend nearly as high a proportion of their wealth(as taxable purchases. IE, interest on a 1mil home is still tax deductible) as the poor.
If you're netting 30k a year with two kids, you're spending every penny. If you're netting 400k a year, your home, vacation home and 3 bmw's are paid off? Proportionally, you're putting a ton less sales tax into the system. A gallon of milk still costs the same. Sure, you drive your m3 like a maniac and get 10mpg compared to the civic's 30. But you're making 12 times as much, and only putting three times as much gas tax revenue in.
Thus, regressive income taxes.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Excessive taxation eventually leads to tax evasion and avoidance. It changes the dynamics of the risk/reward. At a 39% tax rate it's not worth the risk to cheat. Kick that to 90% and I seriously reconsider.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
CosmicCowboy
Excessive taxation eventually leads to tax evasion and avoidance. It changes the dynamics of the risk/reward. At a 39% tax rate it's not worth the risk to cheat. Kick that to 90% and I seriously reconsider.
Well yeah, I doubt there is some magic number, it should be somewhat dynamic. Or rather, that mythical number isn't static. Of course, nobody knows what ideal to aim for(and then adjust with changing economic and social health).
Thus, capital gains is taxed at 15%. No need to cheat if you're really uber-rich.
Accounting and tax preparation should be considered a creative or performance art, at the highest levels.
I wonder if I can find an analysis of say, the top 1% of wealth in the US, and how much of their income is taxed at 39.6% and how much is capital gains at 15%.
edit: But come on, it's not like dollar 400,000 is going to be at 39.6 and dollar 400,000 is going to be at 90%, it'll still be regressive.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
The Beatles were a great example. They were making shitloads of money but the UK government was only letting them keep a dime of every dollar they made. They renounced UK citizenship and moved to the US.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Just out of curiousity - who's being targeted here? Top 10%? Top 1%? Top 0.1%?
Is it fair to lump somone (taxing them at the same rate as) at the low-end of the 10% (roughly 160k) with someone at the high end (1.13mil)? If so, why?
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
TheSullyMonster
Thus, capital gains is taxed at 15%. No need to cheat if you're really uber-rich.
Accounting and tax preparation should be considered a creative or performance art, at the highest levels.
I wonder if I can find an analysis of say, the top 1% of wealth in the US, and how much of their income is taxed at 39.6% and how much is capital gains at 15%.
Not that I've run the numbers, but I would think that if you eliminated capital gains tax rates entirely and just taxed it all as normal income, you could actually drop the marginal income tax rates and still end up with more revenue. Instead of taxing salary and benefits at 39.6% and cap gains at 15%, just lump them together and tax it all at something like 30% (or whatever magic number less than 39.6% makes sense). Seems like that would go a long way towards putting those working for their money and those living off investment income on the same field.
Just an idea...........
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Of course if I were king, we'd go to this.
tax paid = (all income - the poverty level) X (one tax rate for everybody)
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
vy65
Just out of curiousity - who's being targeted here? Top 10%? Top 1%? Top 0.1%?
Is it fair to lump somone (taxing them at the same rate as) at the low-end of the 10% (roughly 160k) with someone at the high end (1.13mil)? If so, why?
The capital gains rate, sure. It's that way currently.:lol
I would support more steps in the higher income levels with a regressive income tax schedule, sure.
There would be more than one step between 160k and 1.13mil.:lol
But really, it's capital gains and investments that are the tax shelters.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
TheSullyMonster
The capital gains rate, sure. It's that way currently.:lol
I would support more steps in the higher income levels with a regressive income tax schedule, sure.
There would be more than one step between 160k and 1.13mil.:lol
But really, it's capital gains and investments that are the tax shelters.
I wasn't focused on the capital gains rate. That said, chances are much higher that someone who makes 160k isn't going to have as much capital gains (or losses) as someone who makes 1.13mil. But that's besides the point.
While there is a big problem with the current treatment of cap gains - I also don't see the utility in taxing someone who makes 160k at the same rate as a millionaire. We don't tax someone who makes 30k the same as we tax someone who makes 300k - so why's there a difference?
inb4 30k <<< 160k, dipshit, that's why we tax them differently. My point is about the rate, not aggregate amount of tax paid.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
vy65
Is it fair
Here we go again . . .
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
DarrinS
Can you become a famous cardiovascular surgeon by luck?
Strawman... You can be a famous cardiovascular surgeon and not be rich...
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Bartleby
Here we go again . . .
This time it's different. I'm only saying that it's fucked to charge someone who makes 160 the same tax rate as someone who makes 1.13mil.
::That's it and that's all.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LnGrrrR
Quote:
Originally Posted by DarrinS
I didn't mean to imply that ALL poor people have character flaws, just the ones in my family.
Understood DarrinS. Wasn't sure or not if you were extending that analogy to America at large. :toast
How many of you that disagree with the premise that we need to encourage people to work rather than be on the welfare systems?
I agree with Darrin, but I see it in others. How many of you have talked to someone on one or more social system? Their priority is rarely finding work. They already have a security blanket. Wouldn't one way to get them off the system to be to have an actual threat that they system may kick them off?
Yes, I know. Someone will attack that idea. First realize. It is only one of several things that can be done to make the social welfare systems less appealing to live in. People need to be motivated one way or another to be self sufficient instead of relying on others.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Agloco
Yeah, I wasn't specific enough. Proportionally to the rich, no. Having been on both sides of the fence I'm completely torn (crappy I know.....). But yes, we need the per capita tax to rise for a bit.
How do you suggest we do that. From time to time, I have looked at the revenues generated. You can only remove so much. All the data I have seen suggests that no matter what rate you tax at the federal level, they get an average of 18.3% GDP in tax revenue. raising taxes create a short term increase in revenue, but it quickly returns to that 18.3% area. Decreasing taxes produce a short term loss of revenue, but same thing. It returns to that 18.3% area.
Now think about this concept for a moment.
This is why so many people advocate tax cuts rather than tax increases. Tax cuts allow for a larger economy. Higher taxes make for a smaller economy. When the economy is more prosperous, that 18.3% is a larger number.
Sure, there are practical limits. The problem is finding the lowest rate we can tax before that 18.3% starts dripping. Zero tax would produce zero revenue, at would 100% because people would stop working.
You are obviously intelligent. I ask you to look at the history of revenues and spending in percentages of GDP. Once you see this, you will agree we need to maximize our economy and keep spending under that 18.3% level.
Start here.
What is spending under this administration? Isn't it something like 21% or 22%?
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
vy65
I wasn't focused on the capital gains rate. That said, chances are much higher that someone who makes 160k isn't going to have as much capital gains (or losses) as someone who makes 1.13mil. But that's besides the point.
While there is a big problem with the current treatment of cap gains - I also don't see the utility in taxing someone who makes 160k at the same rate as a millionaire. We don't tax someone who makes 30k the same as we tax someone who makes 300k - so why's there a difference?
inb4 30k <<< 160k, dipshit, that's why we tax them differently. My point is about the rate, not aggregate amount of tax paid.
If you're just speaking philosophically, cool. If you're responding to me specifically, did you not read the 2nd and 3rd lines of my post you quoted?
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Eliminate the capital gains tax and you eliminate life as we know it. Real estate investments suddenly don't work financially.
Want to pay $2000 a month for a shit apartment? Just go ahead and vote to eliminate capital gains.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wild Cobra
How many of you that disagree with the premise that we need to encourage people to work rather than be on the welfare systems?
I agree with Darrin, but I see it in others. How many of you have talked to someone on one or more social system? Their priority is rarely finding work. They already have a security blanket. Wouldn't one way to get them off the system to be to have an actual threat that they system may kick them off?
Yes, I know. Someone will attack that idea. First realize. It is only one of several things that can be done to make the social welfare systems less appealing to live in. People need to be motivated one way or another to be self sufficient instead of relying on others.
1) welfare systems in this country almost universally require work from those who are able.
2) lifetime limits and other disincentives have drastically limited the amount of time people on welfare actually stay on welfare. It is FAR less than you seem to imply.
3) Based on this, I don't think you have clue one what makes most people poor in this country.
Why don't you do some research on actual poverty, with data and shit, and get back to us.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
CosmicCowboy
Eliminate the capital gains tax and you eliminate life as we know it. Real estate investments suddenly don't work financially.
Want to pay $2000 a month for a shit apartment? Just go ahead and vote to eliminate capital gains.
http://www.trephination.net/gallery/...dramaimage.jpg
Making capital gains equal to labor in the tax code is simply a way to be fair to the people who work, as opposed to punishing labor and unfairly rewarding capital.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Wild Cobra
How do you suggest we do that. From time to time, I have looked at the revenues generated. You can only remove so much. All the data I have seen suggests that no matter what rate you tax at the federal level, they get an average of 18.3% GDP in tax revenue. raising taxes create a short term increase in revenue, but it quickly returns to that 18.3% area. Decreasing taxes produce a short term loss of revenue, but same thing. It returns to that 18.3% area.
Now think about this concept for a moment.
This is why so many people advocate tax cuts rather than tax increases. Tax cuts allow for a larger economy. Higher taxes make for a smaller economy. When the economy is more prosperous, that 18.3% is a larger number.
Sure, there are practical limits. The problem is finding the lowest rate we can tax before that 18.3% starts dripping. Zero tax would produce zero revenue, at would 100% because people would stop working.
You are obviously intelligent. I ask you to look at the history of revenues and spending in percentages of GDP. Once you see this, you will agree we need to maximize our economy and keep spending under that 18.3% level.
Start
here.
What is spending under this administration? Isn't it something like 21% or 22%?
The laffer curve. Yes, we have heard about this mythical creature.
Reality sort of works that way, but there is no "magic" level. No one, and I do mean no one, has ever gotten a good number for the "optimal" tax rates, and it isn't for a lack of trying.
Sorry, the laffer curve is a novelty. A shiny trinket that is nice to look at, but useless for practical people.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
RandomGuy
Why not just make all income taxed at the same rate as capital gains, with no exemptions?
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
It's time to ditch these theories and balance the budget. That means increased tax collections and reduced expenditures, both of which our politics naturally function to prevent. Tax rates are too low across the board, and an increase does not mean the advent of socialism.
Further, we need to rethink the cost of maintaining an imperial military, as well as revamping the entitlement programs to where those provide a guarantee to those who need it as opposed to everyone.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Marcus Bryant
Tax rates are too low across the board, and an increase does not mean the advent of socialism.
Sure it does.
We need to get people off the government tit.
As for tax rates, why then does the revenue stay around a 18.3% average of GDP, no matter what the tax rates are? i would say we are around the optimum tax rate, and we should tax less, to the point that we see we are on the low side where larger economy and 18.2% would be a larger revenue than on the other side of the peak where 18.2% of a smaller economy would be less revenue.
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Re: Tax the Super Rich now or face a revolution
Better yet, let them starve so their inferior genes disappear.