Aizle wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
I have a hard time with the whole "wealthy" or "rich" label, because I've known quite a few people who make 100's of thousands a year and they are still living paycheck-to-paycheck. Wealth, to me isn't how much you make, it's how much you have accumulated.
Sure there are people who make a butt ton of money who are still terrible with handling it. That, however, is a separate issue. And you are technically correct, that wealth is how much you've accumulated. But obviously someone who makes "100's of thousands a year" has the potential to accumulate orders of magnitude more wealth in the same time period as someone who only makes 50k a year.
Absolutely, but "potential wealth accumulation" isn't quite as effective in creating the desired class strife as "rich", is it?
Aizle wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
I agree that the exemptions are out if hand, but I'll add that it's the people who have the ears of congressmen that get the exemptions. BTW, I hate the term "loopholes" when dealing with the tax code because it brings to mind the idea that someone found a sneaky way to get around the code, when, in fact, the code was written with the express intent to create the ways for certain people to get out of paying. If someone pays a lobbyist to get them an exemption, they'll get it whether the congressman has a D or an R after their name. That said, it confused me that you state that it isn't "equitable and fair" because of the exemptions are used by both the upper and lower income taxpayers. If everyone is using them (as I take your statement to mean), then that seems both equitable and fair.
Certainly some exemption are on purpose, and created via lobbists and the like. However, there are also "loopholes" for lack of a better term, where it's pretty obvious that the results were not the initial intent, but the results of someone gaming the system.
I can't think of one that wasn't intended.
Aizle wrote:
Neither are desireable.
I don't think you really believe that (take for example, the minimum income before taxes are assessed). I'd be in a completely different situation financially if there were no mortgage interest exemption, child tax-credit, depreciation of goods and property.
Aizle wrote:
As for my comment about "equitable and fair", it's more pointing out that many of the various tricks out there to reduce one's tax burden require significant amounts of money in order to employ. So by definition they are only available to the "wealthy".
Like what?
Aizle wrote:
In addition to that, because many tax related calculations are percentage based, the impact on the revenue side is larger on top of it. Someone gaming the system for a 10% reduction in their taxes @ 50k doesn't have near the impact on the national budget as someone gaming a 10% reduction @ 10M.
So it's not "equitable and fair" to the Gov't.?
Aizle wrote:
A "progressive flat tax" is something I basically made up, and it's more or less what it says. It's a flat tax (no exemptions, deductions, etc.) where the tax rate does change based on income level. So as just a theoretical example, 0% at the poverty line, 5% from the poverty line to 2x the povertly line, 10% from 2x the poverty line to 10x the poverty line, etc. NOTE: I'm pulling those numbers and breakpoints out of thin air, with no thought into how "correct" they would be just as an example.
I don't agree, for the most part, but it would be preferable in many way to what we have now.
Aizle wrote:
Vindicarre wrote:
I must ask again, about "society's benefits", I just don't think we're on the same page. I see the benefits to society that must be paid for being things like the court system and our national defense. I don't see how those in the upper income levels benefit more from those things than those of lower incomes.
Certainly those things are examples of society's benefits. As are things like roads, schools, parks, police...
Upper income levels absolutely benefit more from those things than those of lower incomes. A simple drive through a wealthy neighborhood and a poor neighborhood should bring to light many observable differences in the quality of the roads, sidewalks, crime levels, police response, schools and parks.
I don't see those things as being within the purview of the Federal Gov't - which may be part of the problem we have in seeing things through the same lens.
Aizle wrote:
And that speaks nothing to the fact that the business owners, many of which fall into the wealthy category, have been able to be successful because of the stability provided by a well run country. Whether that is the roadways for transportation of goods, police for security of their business or schools for a quality educated workforce.
I don't see how business owners benefit any more than their customers from those items. Additionally, those business owners benefit society to a greater degree than others because they offer other people employment. Again, those should be state and local issues in any event. If that were truly the case, we'd be able to see which taxation methodology would be most effective and really beneficial to society if the state/local gov'ts were allowed control of how it is dealt with. The whole "50 laboratories of innovation".
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