Xequecal wrote:
Then isn't the current system triple taxation, not double?
Yes, no, sort of, and mostly yes again.
Xequecal wrote:
You pay when you get the money, CGT when you put it in, and then income tax again when you withdraw it?
This is ... not how it works.
You earn money. You pay income taxes. Theoretically, post-income tax money is free capital. Free as in liberty not free as in beer. You invest the money. You capitalize that investment for a gain. You pay taxes on the absolute dollar difference between what you put and what you take out at 15, 20, or 39.6% depending on duration and type of investment. In some cases, this can mean the tax actually exceeds, adjusted for inflation, the actual gains of your investment.
However, and this is where it becomes particularly insidious, the majority of people are invested in mutual, index, and bond funds. Now, these guys pay 39.6% on their year to year gains for your fund because they all count as short term investments. Indeed, this is one of the primary reasons your funds lag behind the market and suffer more in a downturn. They are taxed ridiculously aggressively. But, you're not personally "paying taxes" because this all comes out of the "fund's" pockets. Now, later in life, since you probably have a 401(k) or a 403(b) or what have you ...
When the gains from that fund become income, you're taxed as if it's income. And since it's non-wage income, it's most likely subject to the AMT at highest marginal.
So, yes, 3 times, but it doesn't quite work how you think.
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