Ladas wrote:
RangerDave wrote:
It's only double taxation if you're taxed on the whole amount of the savings/investment. If you're only taxed on the gains, then there's no double taxation.
Like Social Security... However, snide aside, what you and X and a few others miss is that those distributions/dividends which comprise part of the capital gains were already taxed at full value of 30%+ as profit made by the company before the distribution. Then it gets taxed again at 15% (its actually 18.8% with the passage of Obamacare, which makes Obama's claims of wanting to raise capital gains from 15% to 20% ambigious... is he proposing a 5% increase, or an increase to 20% from its current 18.8?) on the entire amount.
No, I get that, Ladas. However, I make three points in response (well, three and a half):
First, "capital gains" is a much larger universe than corporate distributions/dividends, so at most, it can be argued that one type of capital gain is subject to double taxation, but that type represents a relatively small portion of all capital gains.
Second, if people don't want to be double-taxed on business profits, they can easily choose to do business as a sole proprietorship, a partnership, etc. However, if they want the extra legal benefits of incorporation (e.g., limited liability), one could argue that it's fair to require them to pay extra to get it. Corporate personhood is a double-edged sword.
Third, if we didn't tax both corporate profits and personal income from distributions/dividends, there would be far more incentive for people to just book earnings in whichever category wasn't taxed, thus sheltering themselves from the full amount of tax they're intended to pay. Corporate profits not taxed but dividend income is? Ok, but I swear, my apartment in the city and my second car are really deductible business expenses not things I paid for with personal income. Hm, it's the other way around and corporate profits are taxed, but dividends aren't? Ok, I'll just dividend out the money I need to buy that apartment in the city and a second car. Heads I win, tails the IRS loses.
Lastly, the half point is that, having said all of that, I'm actually not sure where I come down on the issue, but I lean towards reforming the system to avoid or at least minimize the double-taxation while still protecting against the kind of income shifting I just described.