http://tinyurl.com/wfv5lI think we should tax the rich more!
11/29/2006 4:40:38 AM
No one's stopping him from sending more taxes in. In fact, I bet he still has a dilligent accountant making sure he uses all the proper deductions and trusts.
11/29/2006 7:17:18 AM
What about Buffet, who claimed he doesn't do any of that?
11/29/2006 7:44:36 AM
Did he claim that? Well then he's allowed to say he thinks taxes should be higher.Doesn't mean taxes should be higher, but it means his opinion would hold sway on it.Although, he is giving away $40B in order to avoid estate tax. Not that I have any problem with it all going to charity, but he probably cares about philanthropy AND taxes when he's thinking of the good he can do.
11/29/2006 7:49:18 AM
11/29/2006 7:53:38 AM
No, I expressed blind hate. Truthfully, I didn't read this because I've seen Ben Stein speak on it about a dozen times. I figured it was same old same old.AND so it was:First, off
11/29/2006 8:02:41 AM
11/29/2006 8:22:47 AM
2 things...1 - Buffet is waiting till he's dead to give it away so he will already have quit his job.2 - Buffet pays MOST of his taxes in form of capital gains and dividends taxes, not from his employment income. The fact that those are taxed at 15% is why he pays a lower percentage in taxes. Quitting his job would not stop that.And estate tax doesn't care if you have a job, BTW[Edited on November 29, 2006 at 8:28 AM. Reason : .]
11/29/2006 8:27:40 AM
I thought Capital Gains were also counted as income (double taxed)?
11/29/2006 10:20:17 AM
Long-Term Capital Gains (for securities held 1 year and 1 day or more) are taxed at a 15% maximum rate. Lower income earners get taxed at 10% or 5%, but the majority of Americans pay it at 15%. Short-Term Capital Gains are taxed at ordinary income rates.They do this to encourage an investment mindset rather than a trading, and also to encourage savings. It is dividend income that is double taxed. That is because it is taxed as the company earns it as corporate income and then again as personal income later (although as the law stands it is also taxed at 15% under most circumstances). Still double taxed, but taxed less.
11/29/2006 10:39:43 AM
11/29/2006 10:45:47 AM
lol I thought you meant Ben Stein was on welfare x.x
11/29/2006 11:43:44 AM
11/29/2006 12:05:07 PM
Hey Kris, you know how I feel about FDR don't you?
11/29/2006 12:09:53 PM
11/29/2006 12:11:08 PM
11/29/2006 12:14:16 PM
Well, I'm kinda iffy on it. In a perfect world, I think that everyone should be taxed at a flat rate (kinda like Britain) because that way everyone faces the same marginal tax and people aren't discouraged more for being wealthier. On the other hand, I don't have a major problem with upping the tax rate progressive (within very reasonable limits) because I know that the rate would be very high in order for the government to support its ridiculous level of spending. I guess I'll say, its a necessary evil until we can get the government back into its proper roles and back to a manageable level of spending.__And on that quote: Anyone who, when coming up with 1 principle to define America, has anything to say about taxes in the principle, is a scary human being. One of the many reasons FDR was a shitty president (outside his military conduct).[Edited on November 29, 2006 at 12:47 PM. Reason : .]
11/29/2006 12:46:32 PM
I've never quite understood how a progressive tax is supposed to "discourage people from being wealthier.""Well if I make more money I'll have to give a higher percentage . . . I mean I'll still have more money than I would otherwise but I just really, really don't like medicare, so I'll stick it to them and keep making less."
11/29/2006 1:12:43 PM
^... on the margin, it holds true.
11/29/2006 1:17:42 PM
Well let's look at it this way. Two guys are given an opportunity to go above and beyond in their jobs/careers/whatever and make an additional $100. Guy 1 has a marginal tax bracket of 35% whereas guy 2 has a marginal tax bracket of 15%. The opportunity for Guy 1 offers a net gain of $65, while guy 2 has a net gain of $85. Guy 1 has a lower benefit from the opportunity, so if he sees the cost of doing said activity as around $70, he won't do it, although he would if given the same bracket as guy 2.Similarly, its like me asking you to babysit my kids for $3/hr. You'd probably decline because $3/hr isn't worth your time. It would be like, instead of giving you more money because you feel your time is worth more, I actually give you less because you already have so much.__Crede said it much better:
11/29/2006 1:18:09 PM
11/29/2006 1:27:32 PM
It should. You know, if you want to give everything you are possibly able to charity, you are free to do it.
11/29/2006 1:31:44 PM
^"If men were angels..."
11/29/2006 1:32:29 PM
11/29/2006 1:39:46 PM
11/29/2006 1:42:00 PM
11/29/2006 2:28:49 PM
11/29/2006 3:08:27 PM
11/29/2006 4:16:42 PM
Looking at your graph it looks like GDP was lower in 1938 than it was in 1936, a shocking result when you recognize that the economy was coming from a ridiculously low point in 1933. It is easy to get economic growth after a recession and FDR even managed to fowl up any recovery. If FDR wanted to end the recession he needed to scrap the tax hikes of 1932, scrap the tariff hikes of 1930, cut spending, and make the Federal Reserve halt the collapse of the money supply (reduce short-term rates to 1% as was done in 2001 and have it buy up every treasury bond it could find from anyone willing to sell, be they Member Banks, non-Member Banks, Companies, John Doe from the street, foreigners; hell, buy up state bonds too; this is what we call "running the presses"). He did none of these things. Hell, he did the exact opposite in some circumstances. Income taxes soared from 25% to 70% and then 91%. He even hiked tariffs again, further disrupting activity and worsening rural shortages. His banking holiday followed by the forced closure of banks only reduced the money supply even more as people's savings were locked up. Any greater confidence provided could have less disruptively come from Federal Reserve loans.
11/29/2006 5:49:48 PM
C'mon L-Snark... he did have that great smile and that funny elitist-looking cigarette holder thing.The problem with progressive tax system is that it hits the younger person who is in his peak-earning years...making the most money. Once you're rich, you're paying capital gains rates which don't change as you make more on your investments. But the young couple trying to raise kids and pay off a house and cars are paying through the nose. The system puts a major drag on their ability to pull themselves up.
11/29/2006 7:44:16 PM
why cant we just like take everyone who has more than like 10 million dollars and take as much money as it takes to get them all to 10 million dollars cause i mean who cant live on 10 million dollars
11/29/2006 7:57:50 PM
11/29/2006 8:29:59 PM
11/29/2006 10:07:41 PM
11/30/2006 1:27:12 AM
you must not have read itit's 45-65
11/30/2006 1:41:55 AM
^looks like the earnings are close, but yes, 45-64 are the years w/ the higher taxes there. You are right here.[Edited on November 30, 2006 at 1:45 AM. Reason : .]
11/30/2006 1:44:59 AM
11/30/2006 3:27:50 AM
11/30/2006 7:36:38 AM
11/30/2006 8:01:55 AM
Then, at the margin, people would not partake in activities that are a net gain to society because the taxes reduced their gain to below their opportunity cost.In english, it means at some point it would be worth $100 to society if Person A took some action. To him, it is worth $90, but if his marginal tax rate is more than 10%, he won't take part in the activity.
11/30/2006 8:40:35 AM
These events aren't mutually exclusive? Why does person A not want the additional $90?
11/30/2006 8:50:22 AM
Maybe I wasn't clear. Person A would partake in the activity so long as he netted $90 or more. With a tax rate greater than 10%, he won't partake in the $100 activity, because it isn't worth his time.Let me ask you this: Would you watch my car for three hours while I went downtown? What if I paid you $3? Do you not want $3? Of course you want $3 (its free pie and chips), but your time is more valuable than $1/hr.There is some point at which you will engage in the activity of watching my car, my guess is somewhere around $10/hr or so, but I don't know you. Well if I was willing to pay you $12/hr and you'd be willing to do it for $10/hr, then we have a net gain here from you watching my car. Unfortunately, Uncle Sam steps in and says he wants 25% of it from you in taxes. Well at the tax rate of 25%, you don't want to watch my car (you'd only net $9/hr, under the $10 you require) and so we don't engage in this beneficial transaction because of your marginal tax bracket.Now that's a silly example, but you can replace watching my car with working on some productive output.
11/30/2006 9:19:12 AM
Yea, thats all well and good, but assuming there are no legal alternatives to my opportunity cost, at some point I have to eat, and whether I like it or not (that is, whether I like getting taxed through the nose), I'll eventually do the work to eat. And we are talking about taxes here. If the tax rate is the tax rate, then I have to deal with it.Given everything being equal, that is, no legal way to "scheme" the system, everyone still attempts to make as much money as they can for their time. I mean, we aren't talking about tax rates so exorbitant here that people give up on life (especially those that are already rich and making fat sums of money off of fat sums of money where they don't actually have to do work, they just get rich by having the money already). And quoting a 91% tax rate as some sort of statement that the rate could get to be exorbitant is pretty absurd when in the same sentence it was shown to really be 15%.
11/30/2006 9:49:40 AM
Blind, you're right, people will continue to work so they can eat. But the people we need out there investing their time and effort into starting businesses aren't worried about eating. They're worried about their 5th ferrari. Does that piss off poor people, absolutely, but if through their insatiable greed, they also create thousands of jobs for others, then it is still a net gain to society.With a progressive system, the wealthier you get (and this, the more likely you are to be able to create jobs for others) the less reward you receive for each dollars worth of your work. Eventually you decide that 4 ferraris are plenty and you don't need the extra yacht and you just decide to relax. That's a net loss to society.
11/30/2006 10:01:30 AM
11/30/2006 10:03:57 AM
In the liberal world, jobs just appear out of nowhere and money simply falls randomly from the sky onto the lucky ones. Hard work, sacrifice, intelligence, risk-taking are just tools of the evil rich.
11/30/2006 10:09:18 AM
well keynes and marx must have really drawn out their explainations of how jobs fall out of the sky to get such long books
11/30/2006 10:11:04 AM
11/30/2006 10:49:29 AM
11/30/2006 10:53:49 AM
11/30/2006 11:28:40 AM