T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
62.1 | | MUDHWK::LAWLER | Not turning 39... | Fri Feb 14 1992 11:45 | 10 |
|
My simple rule:
If you file long form for anything other than Mortgage interest
deductions, then the govt. doesn't consider you to be middle
class.
-al
|
62.2 | One definition | VISUAL::FALLET | | Fri Feb 14 1992 12:29 | 22 |
|
I recently read a brief article on this subject (don't remember where).
The gist of it was that the gov't doesn't have a definition of
"middle class." That's why the politicians (especially the Democrats)
fool so many people into believing they'll be getting a tax break,
when in fact their taxes go up because the gov't doesn't consider them
middle class.
The author of this article proposed that a workable definition of
middle class would be the middle three-fifths of the population based
on annual income; one fifth is rich and the other one fifth is poor.
Based on this definition, if I remember correctly, transition from
middle class to rich occurs at around $60,000 for a single person
and $75,000 for a married couple.
Theoretically, this seems pretty reasonable, but practically speaking,
a $60,000/year earner probably feels a lot closer (class-wise) to
his $50,000/year friends than to CEOs and sports stars who make
in the millions or hundreds of thousands.
-Michael
|
62.3 | Now for some statistics | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Fri Feb 14 1992 12:39 | 19 |
|
The Congressional Budget, in their infinite wisdom, has taken a swag
at defining the middle class. Don't read on until you've formed your
own opinion:
(spoiler)
The CBO says the middle class might be the middle three fifths of
the population, by income. (Source: WSJ, 2/13/92, p. A2, col3)
This works out to (pre-tax) incomes of $15,000 to $60,000 (using a
family of 3). (same source)
This means the median engineer ($41,000) married to the median
Registered nurse/health therapist ($30,000) are not middle class.
(source: Fortune, 2/24/92, looks like p. 58 on my photocopy).
They are obviously rich and must be punished. :-)
|
62.4 | "fairness" is a catch-word for "stealing" | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Fri Feb 14 1992 12:48 | 25 |
| .0> 2) Many "tax cuts for the middle class" impose a higher tax on the
> "rich" and then give the money to the middle class.
> 2a) How does this put money into the economy?
>
> 2b) Why not give it to the poor instead?
The long and short of it is the middle class votes more. It has
*nothing* to do with the economy. Class warfare, redistributionist
politics of envy is a game of political power.
Anywhere you look around the world, when countries go the "Robin Hood"
route they quickly decay. Witness the vast majority of Africa, or even
Argentina post WWII. Compare that to the Pacific rim which went the
capitalist route instead; there is where all the money is, too. Recently
Latin America has gone more free-enterprise and behold, their markets are
starting to sparkle.
One hypothesis is that the rich are more productive and taking money from
them reduces their ability to provide employment to others, and reduces
the incentive for working people to work harder for that extra pay.
At the same time, giving money to the poor reduces their incentive to
find work and become productive members of society. But if you prefer
that your citizens all live in poverty, then tax away and give away.
John
|
62.5 | | SSBN1::YANKES | | Fri Feb 14 1992 15:56 | 8 |
|
Re: .0
There are probably an equal number of definitions of "middle class"
as there are politicians arguing some point in a class-versus-class
issue.
-craig
|
62.6 | You may not be what you think you are.... | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Fri Feb 14 1992 16:27 | 8 |
| Money Magazine also has an article (I think it was the Feb. issue)
saying something close to .3. The "middle class" in American to day has
an average FAMILY INCOME of about (if I remember correctly) $25K to
$50K. I guess that made alot of folks working in DEC to be the "rich
class". So, don't think when the politicians talking about sutting tax
for the "middle class" they meant it to be you....
Mike
|
62.7 | More myths, legends, and stats | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Fri Feb 14 1992 17:05 | 31 |
| So what you're all saying is that this isn't about economic policy,
it's about buying votes. And that about one third of the people
who consider themselves middle class are really not (by government
terms).
More stats: Taxing the rich (1987 figures, 1990 statistical abstract,
US Census Bureau):
The ultra-rich (over a million $ a year): There are 36,000 of them and
they make $75 billion a year. They pay $25 billion in taxes. If we
taxed millionaires at a rate of 100%, we'd have $50 billion more for
the budget - a slight dent in the deficit or $500 apiece for the
middle class.
Who pays the taxes ? (Dow Jones - Irwin Business and Investment
Almanac -1990, p. 545) If the middle class were the middle 50% of
taxpayers, that would be those with incomes between $7800 and $34000.
They make 36% of the money and pay 22.6% of the taxes. The upper class
pays 76.7% of taxes, with more than half of that coming from those
making over $71000.
I'm sorry, but I can't see where the so-called "upper class," those
making over $60000 or $70000 per household, are so rich or deserve
to pay more taxes. It could be that I live in the Greater Boston
Area, where the median home price is $171,000.
I would sure welcome the chance to discuss this with a group of
politicians. (Congress - $129000 a year, puts them in the top 2%).
|
62.8 | | DENVER::BERNARD | Dave from Cleveland | Sat Feb 15 1992 12:06 | 11 |
|
I believe I heard that the Middle Class, wrt Congress's current $400
proposed credit, ends at families earning more than $80,000. Those
families that do, therefore, must be rich, and naturally their taxes
are to be raised.
It's the typical congressional hocus-pocus. Like allowing full tax
adjustments for IRAs only to those people who can't afford to use
it.
Dave
|
62.9 | | SSBN1::YANKES | | Sun Feb 16 1992 21:55 | 41 |
|
Re: .7
>So what you're all saying is that this isn't about economic policy,
>it's about buying votes.
Well, I won't speak for anyone else, but I don't consider any
election year antic to be anything _but_ the buying of votes in one way
of another. And, sad to say, I'm rarely disappointed. :-(
Look at Bush's plan, for instance. Skipping the argument of
whether it will actually work or not, why did he wait until the State
of the Union Address to announce it? Ever since November, he kept
saying "wait until the State of the Union Address, wait until..."
If he really had the plan worked out in November (as his comments
seemed to indicate), why did he wait? Any positive effects of his plan
were simply delayed by two months; two months of slipping further into
the recession. Now you tell me if that sounds like pure "economic
policy" or whether it was timed for maximum political benefit (ie.
buying votes)...
Oh, about those stats. Would you give more details on those
figures that the highest paid people made a total of $75 billion and
paid a total of $25 billion in taxes? Given that the top tax bracket
is only 31%, right off the bat the numbers don't add up. (And yes, I'm
skipping the 33% zone of wiping out the lower-bracketed money. The 33%
money wipes out the 15% and 28% taxed money to bring the average up to
31%, so the "amount paid versus taxable income" can't exceed 31%.) All
I can presume is that the income figure of $75 billion counts earned
income (such as salaries) only while the $25 billion tax figure is the
total bottom line taxes -- which would include the taxes on the interest,
dividends, capital gains, etc., etc. that these people had. To keep this
as an apples-to-apples comparison, I'd like to see the sum total of the
adjusted gross incomes plus the deductions taken and _then_ compare it to
the $25 billion in taxation figure. That should yield a more accurate
figure on what effective percent income tax the extreem upper class
pay. (I'm not saying, incidently, that the US Census Bureau numbers
are individually incorrect. I just think that the wrong numbers are being
compared against each other.)
-craig
|
62.10 | Read this over the weekend. | STOIC::ALAN | | Mon Feb 17 1992 08:12 | 4 |
| The current plan put forth by the Democrats calls for the upper limit
to the middle class to be $185,000 for a two income family. So if that
comes to pass then most of us can breath a little easier.
|
62.11 | Reply to 9 and 10 | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Mon Feb 17 1992 09:46 | 27 |
| Re 9. I did have numbers slightly confused.
In 1986, millionaires had 72.5 billion in AGI (which includes interest,
dividends, etc), 57 billion in taxable income, and paid 29 billion in
taxes.
In 1987, millionaires had 87.2 billion in income, 75 billion in
taxable income, and paid 25.5 billion in taxes.
You'll note a large change between years - taxable income went up
dramatically while taxes actually went down. Must be that tax cut
for the rich everone talks about.
Re 10. Where did you read that - I'd like to check it out. If the
middle class includes those making up to 185000, that includes 98%
of us - which is about how many of us consider us middle class. The
other thing is that in that proposal, Congress is now in the middle
class!
My gathering of these articles started a year or so ago when I ran
across an article entitled "The Myth of Soaking the Rich" in the
magazine Across the Board. The obviously conservative columnist
showed that soaking the rich could do ONE of the following: help the
poor, health care for the elderly, boost education, slight reduction
in the deficit. Since then national health care has become another big
rage. His point was that the rich can pay for one of these. Guess
who pays for the rest???
|
62.12 | The Clinton Plan | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Mon Feb 17 1992 17:31 | 33 |
| Here is a brief analysis of a Bill Clinton plan, although I have seen
different versions of it and I use 1987 numbers.
Bill Clinton proposes a 10% tax break for the middle class and a tax
increase for those making over $100,000 (Boston Globe, 2/17/92).
The Numbers: (1987 data, US Stat. Abs)
______________________________________________________________
Number Total Income Total taxes
The Middle Class
(middle 3/5 ths) 64.2 million $1.115 tri 92.5 bil
______________________________________________________________
Those making 1.6 million $0.464 tri 117.6 bil
over $100,000
______________________________________________________________
10% tax cut for middle class = 9.25 billion dollars = $144 each (avg)
for people with incomes from $6000 to $36000.
Made up for by 9.25 billion on "rich" = $5781 each(avg).
Middle class tax as a percent of AGI goes from 8.3% to 7.5%.
High income tax as a percent of AGI goes from 25.3% to 27.3%.
A word of advice to the middle class from presidential candidate Dave
Barry "If you're going to take a bribe, hold out for top dollar."
$144 a year isn't going to allow the middle class to help the auto or
housing industry very much. However, it is enough for a couple of trips
to WalMart. Sam Walton, richest man in America, backs Bill Clinton.
Makes you go 'Hmmmmmmmmmm'.
|
62.13 | So what did you expect... | SSDEVO::RMCLEAN | | Mon Feb 17 1992 18:48 | 1 |
| Yes but they are both from Arkansas!!!
|
62.14 | Shopping styles of the rich and famous | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Feb 18 1992 09:11 | 3 |
| If you're Bush supporter, you can go to JC Penney's, or better yet, to your
local supermarket to marvel at the scanners. If you're an admirer of
Donald Trump, you can spend your $144 at K-Mart.
|
62.15 | re .-1 | VMSSG::NICHOLS | conferences are like apple barrels | Tue Feb 18 1992 09:58 | 3 |
| re your 'filing long form for any reason other than mortgage interest'
you overlooked those who file long form for medical reasons
|
62.16 | We could calculate who deducts what... | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Tue Feb 18 1992 10:49 | 11 |
| I now have the data on who takes what itemized duductions. I'll
look into it, but looking only at the rich (over $100,000) per year:
Most dollars deducted in that group is taxes (esp state & local)
# 2 deduction is interest paid (remember, it's 1987)
# 3 is contributions.
If I could get this all in a spreadsheet, I could tell who (poor,
middle, or rich) took the most deductions (per person and as a
percent of income) for each type of deduction. But, that'll be
for non-work time...
|
62.17 | Sir Patrick of Buchanomics | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Tue Feb 18 1992 17:06 | 25 |
| We have analyzed the Clinton middle class tax plan as a simple
redistribution of wealth in an effort to buy votes. To be fair,
we shall analyze Pat Buchanan's capital gains tax cut in terms of
it being a tax break for rich Republicans.
Who has capital gains? According to 1986 returns (US Stat Abst),
roughly 4 million people show net gain less loss from sale of
property and other capital assets. Half of those people made
under $50,000 - Buchanan would exempt them from capital gains
taxes. Those making over $50,000 would pay a reduced rate.
Those making under 50k realized a gain of about $20 billion, so the
tax break for them would be 100% of the taxes on $20 billion.
Those making over 50k realized a gain of $114 billion. So a capital
gains tax elimination would help the rich in terms of more dollars
or more dollars per person in taxes saved. So Buchanan proposes
that their rate be reduced, but not to zero. This plan has the illusion
of being "fair" (taxing the rich more) but not really eliminating much of the
capital gains tax base (only 20 of the 134 billion would pay no taxes), thus
reducing the burden on the deficit. This would depend on just how much taxes
are paid on these gains now and what the proposed rate isfor those making
over 50000, and that I don't know.
Anyone care to summarize current capital gains tax rates???
|
62.18 | Am I part of this "we"??? | SSBN1::YANKES | | Tue Feb 18 1992 17:46 | 12 |
|
Re: .17
>We have analyzed the Clinton middle class tax plan as a simple
>redistribution of wealth in an effort to buy votes. To be fair,
>we shall analyze Pat Buchanan's capital gains tax cut in terms of
>it being a tax break for rich Republicans.
Who is this "we" you're referring to? "We" as in "us noters" or
"we" as in some other group that is giving you this data?
-craig
|
62.19 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Feb 19 1992 10:05 | 5 |
| Capital gains rates are the same as ordinary income rates.
I believe only one of the candidates (one of the Democrat also-rans) backs
the capital gains treatment that's equitable and reasonable, namely indexing
for inflation.
|
62.20 | Less government -- More freedom | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:14 | 9 |
| .19> I believe only one of the candidates (one of the Democrat also-rans) backs
> the capital gains treatment that's equitable and reasonable, namely indexing
> for inflation.
IYO. IMO, the only "equitable and reasonable" approach is a rate of ZERO
for both gains and losses. That permits market forces, not tax policy,
to determine the best place for me to invest my capital.
John
|
62.21 | will trade some "justice" for simplification. | SUBSYS::GANESH | Ganesh | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:44 | 29 |
| Re .20
Interesting. And how about interest on bank CD's and bonds?
What if I decide that the best place for my money for the next
25 years is three-month T-bills? Surely, it helps the Government
cut its borrowing costs if there are many people around who still
want to lend money? Or are fixed-rate instruments somehow
not considered "investments"?
Personally, I don't care what "method" the Government uses
to decide what my gains are - as long as the same logic
applies to stocks, bonds, cash, real estate, and Twinkies to boot.
Many features of the current tax nightmare (sorry.. system),
e.g. the "double taxation" of stock dividends, the mess that
passes for all the things one can claim "deductions" for,
and the substantial break on mortgage interest,
have caused considerable distortions in the capital markets.
Not to mention created a living for entire corporations
full of people - many of them very intelligent and quite capable
of other more productive work - who do nothing but sit around
trying to figure out for you what the latest edition of the
tax books have to say.
*The* major tax reform I'd like to see would involve
drastic simplification of the tax codes. Politically
unrealistic, but that's what I want.
Ganesh.
|
62.22 | simplification is justice | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Wed Feb 19 1992 12:59 | 8 |
| .21
I'm with you. Dividends and interest must necessarily be tax-free in
order to compete with capital gains. And taxation must be simplified
in order to free up unproductive bookkeeping. In a related story, hell
froze over last night.
John
|
62.23 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Feb 19 1992 15:21 | 5 |
| re .20:
It's highly unlikely that capital gains will cease being taxed. Of the
various plans to change the capital gains tax, I think that indexing is
the fairest and the one that distorts the market the least.
|
62.24 | | VMSDEV::HAMMOND | Charlie Hammond -- ZKO3-04/S23 -- dtn 381-2684 | Wed Feb 19 1992 15:30 | 10 |
| RE: .21 & .22
Gentlemen, please, *NO* simplification!
Remember the last "tax simlification"?
Our politicians are quite capable of "simplifying" this country
completely out of existence.
(Smiley face intentionally omitted.)
|
62.25 | We vs Me | JURAN::SORRELLS | | Wed Feb 19 1992 15:33 | 13 |
| re:18 (who is the "we")
Sorry about the "we" - I meant the editorial "we", meaning basically me
putting in statistics and asking for comments.
I wish there were more groups doing such analysis. The proliferation
of talk about middle class tax cuts without defining the numbers is
amazing, and the whole topic is a response to that. However, there
are investing implications. Wouldn't short term bonds (popular with
some financial radio talk shows) be affected by changes in tax policy?
Also, certain tax reform groups must have data available on things
like tax simplification and a flat tax. I can't imagine that really
happening, though.
|
62.26 | Disagree without being disagreeable, dammit!! | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Wed Feb 19 1992 16:26 | 16 |
| .23> It's highly unlikely that capital gains will cease being taxed. Of the
> various plans to change the capital gains tax, I think that indexing is
> the fairest and the one that distorts the market the least.
There is the small but significant matter of distinguishing between
facts and opinion. Unlike my .20, your .19 seemed to imply that there
was a foregone conclusion that indexing was The Right Thing to do,
ranking right up there in certainty with the fact that the earth orbits
the sun, the square root of 2 is irrational and JFK was assasinated by
[XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX (deleted, national security)].
I don't mind disagreeing on tax policy; disagreement often leads to
enlightenment, at least among open minds. Let's just remember to
identify opinions as such, and cite appropriate sources for facts.
John
|
62.27 | While we're all dreaming... :-) | SSBN1::YANKES | | Wed Feb 19 1992 20:01 | 34 |
|
Re: .18
Thanks for defining who you were referring to with that "we".
Would you do us all a favor and do a similiar analysis of the Bush
proposals off of the same base numbers? Thanks.
Re: .general discussion re: capital gains rates
The tax simplification that I favor (and no, I'm not holding my
breath waiting for it to be passed!) is to eliminate the entire
personal and corporate income tax behemoths and replace it with an XX%
VAT on everything. That encourages earnings, savings and investments by
making those acts 100% tax-free (and removes all the tax-code-induced
distortions of the various markets) and places the tax disincentive on
consumption. And if the national politics dictates that this is too
regressive, I'd favor the gov't selecting an amount of expenditure per
person that should be VAT-less (enough to cover whatever they define as
"the essentials"), multiply that by the VAT rate and simply mail a check
to everyone for that amount on their birthday. (Not as a B-day present,
but to spread out the outgoing cashflow... :-) Unless you happen to
run a business on the side that buys raw materials and sells finished
products, _no_ tax reporting requirements or document saving would be
needed at all.
Now, of course, its possible to argue that this will immediately
throw us into a depression caused by people dramatically slowing down
their purchases given the new XX% tax. I doubt that will happen since
simultaniously, everyone will stop having federal income tax withholdings
taken from them which should at least equal, if not exceed, the amount of
extra tax that people will be paying on purchases.
-craig
|
62.28 | | SSBN1::YANKES | | Wed Feb 19 1992 20:02 | 4 |
|
Sorry, the reference in .27 to .18 should be to .25.
-c
|
62.29 | another dream from the same VAT | CSSE::NEILSEN | Wally Neilsen-Steinhardt | Thu Feb 20 1992 12:43 | 6 |
| Craig did not mention another advantage of a VAT. It falls equally on imports
and domestically produced goods. This would remove the current tax advantage
imports now have. A VAT should decrease imports and therefore our trade
deficit.
Note that most of our large trading partners have VATs.
|
62.30 | One note, two good ideas | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Thu Feb 20 1992 13:08 | 3 |
| > Note that most of our large trading partners have VATs.
As well as a zero capital gains rate...
|
62.31 | National Sales Tax | NODEX::OLEJARZ | | Thu Feb 20 1992 14:04 | 24 |
| There is an organization (that I heard on the radio) that is pushing
for a national sales tax to replace income taxes. The organization
is called Citizens for Alternative Taxation. I sent for information
because it sounded interesting but I haven't received the info yet.
Their spokesman advocated such a tax on grounds of simplicity,
increased productivity due to reduced overhead of record keeping,
individuals having no interaction with the IRS, level playing field
between imports and domestic goods, etc.
They claimed a 16% tax would work with no exemptions for food or
shelter. Deciding to exempt such things would increase the rate but
would take some of the wind out of the sails of those who would claim
that a national sales tax would be too regressive.
One other benefit cited was that it would be difficult for states to
retain an income tax since they could not depend on the national level
regulations of the IRS. States that required businesses to track such
information would be at a competitive disadvantage with other states
that did not with respect to keeping and/or attracting business leading
to a disincentive to have a state income tax.
Greg
|
62.32 | Of course it's my opinion | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 20 1992 14:19 | 3 |
| re .26:
Whatever I say here is my opinion. I don't feel a need to identify it as such.
|
62.33 | I like it even more now. | SSBN1::YANKES | | Thu Feb 20 1992 14:20 | 7 |
|
Re: .31
Good, then the incentive is for the states to drop the income tax also
and rely on the state sales tax.
-craig
|
62.34 | The Bush Report | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Tue Feb 25 1992 17:58 | 38 |
| Bush proposes lowering the capital gains tax to 15.4% on assets
held more than three years (from the current top of 28%). I calculate
the impact by income as follows:
Average $20000-$30000 return saves $1032 (affects 500000 people)
Average $40000-$50000 return saves $2263 " 285000 "
Average $50000-$99999 return saves $2167 " 1072000 "
Average $100000+ return saves $11152 " 1084000 "
1986 returns, only those reporting gains included. Not all income
levels included. The rich, who get 27% of their income from capital
gains, get a bigger tax break than the 20-30 $k folks, who get only
1% of their income (as a group) from sale of assets.
Bush proposed increasing the exemption from 2150 to 2650 per child.
This proposal gives 17 Billion in exemptions to the middle class and
9 Million in exemptions to the millionaires if kids are evenly
distributed at the rate of 0.58 per tax return using 1986 figures of
61 million in the middle class and 32000 making over a million a year.
There is a proposed $5000 tax credit to first time homebuyers. The
problem in analyzing this is you need to know who can buy a home,
and regional differences in the housing market affect how this benefit
is distributed. For example, the 1989 median price in metropolitan
areas I have lived in ranges from
Atlanta $81,000
Boston $178,000 (I realize these have changed. Boston is
Dallas $88,400 now closer to 171000)
Raleigh $102,000
If the CBO defines the middle class as those making between 15000 and
60000 a year (family of three), then the tax credit is a great boon
to those in the south, but most of the "middle class" folks in Boston
still can't qualify for the median house. Thus comes the regional
difference problem when we try to define the middle class. The per
capita income varies by almost a factor of three between Mississippi
and Connecticut. But so does the cost of living. So that's another
problem in this so called "tax fairness" issue.
|
62.35 | How did you get these numbers? | SSBN1::YANKES | | Tue Feb 25 1992 19:45 | 14 |
|
Re: .34
Thanks. A question, though, how can the average folks in the $20K
to $30K range "saves $1032" if in the next paragraph you say these
folks only get, on average, 1% of their income from the sale of capital
items? 1% of the high end of the range is only $300, and 12.6% of that
(28% - 15.4% proposed) is only $37.80. Even if we double the number to
account for the $20K-30K range being post-deductions (I'm taking a
wild guess here that these ranges are the bottom-line taxable incomes) and
apply the 1% to the overall income (ie. make it $40K-60K), the savings is
still only $75.60.
-craig
|
62.36 | .34 explained (hopefully) | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Wed Feb 26 1992 08:35 | 24 |
| RE. 35
Good question. The 1% of income from capital gains is as a group.
Of all the income reported by people in that range, 1% is from
capital gains. But, only 3.1 % of people in the 20-30K range
reported capital gains. So I took that 1% of all that groups
income (they had about 4 billion in gains) and divided by the
3% of the gropu that reported gains (3% of 16 million is 480,000).
So 4 billion/480000 = about $8000 * 12.6% is around 1000 in savings.
By contrast, 1.5 million people made over 100,000. As a group they
made 358 billion, 96 billion of which was capital gains. 70% of
the group reported such gains, so the calculation follows as above.
Source: US Statistaical Abstract, 1990, quoting 1986 IRS data.
I believe the current Fortune has one of those "Where to Invest"
articles which mentions the implications of some of these proposals.
But to be honest, I wouldn't stake my investment strategy on
election-year politics. What should we do? If we think Bush's
proposals will fly, we should have kids and buy a house? If we
think the tax fairness Democrats will win out, find a lower-paying
job? :-) And if we think Tsongas will win, buy a nuclear car.
|
62.37 | Not to create a rathole, but... | VSSCAD::RITCHIE | Elaine Kokernak Ritchie | Wed Feb 26 1992 08:48 | 6 |
| Could we please change the title of this topic to "Middle income Americans and
tax policy"? The United States is supposed to be a classless society. The
differentiations referred to in this topic are solely based on income, thus
my proposed topic title.
Elaine
|
62.38 | Pardon me, I have to disagree! | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Wed Feb 26 1992 10:20 | 8 |
| re: .37
> tax policy"? The United States is supposed to be a classless society. The
If you believe that, I have a piece of land to sell you in Florida. Like you,
I don't mean to bring this good topic down to a rathole. But, this society is
just like many other societies, it HAS classes! It's just that people here may
not like to think so.
|
62.39 | Call it what you will | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Wed Feb 26 1992 10:48 | 8 |
| The title is not meant to comment on American society. It reflects
a common term used in the mainstream media.
Although the term "middle income" would be more proper, many people
use "middle class." It's like a "hot water heater." A more proper
term would be "water heater," since we don't actually heat water
that is already hot. But every day millions of Americans say "hot
water heater" and we know what they mean.
|
62.40 | | SSBN1::YANKES | | Wed Feb 26 1992 11:17 | 24 |
|
Re: .36
Thanks for explaining where the numbers came from. May I make a
suggestion of recalculating the numbers _without_ excluding the folks who
don't report capital gains? As is, the numbers look like the $100K+ folks
make out "only" 11 times better than the folks in the $20K-30K range while
factoring back in all the folks without capital gains would give, IMO, a
better perspective on who benefits from Bush's plan.
> I believe the current Fortune has one of those "Where to Invest"
> articles which mentions the implications of some of these proposals.
> But to be honest, I wouldn't stake my investment strategy on
> election-year politics. What should we do? If we think Bush's
> proposals will fly, we should have kids and buy a house? If we
> think the tax fairness Democrats will win out, find a lower-paying
> job? :-) And if we think Tsongas will win, buy a nuclear car.
In political funny-seasons like this, I wouldn't make _any_ decision
based upon what any candidate (including Bush in this category) says to get
votes either. Once a bill is proposed and passed into law, fine, then I'll
use it as input for decisions. Now? Nah, no way...
-craig
|
62.41 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 27 1992 13:26 | 2 |
| Is Bush proposing a 45% reduction in capital gains tax, or a 15.4% capital
gains tax? If the latter, it's an *increase* for people in the 15% bracket.
|
62.42 | House passes tax bill | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Fri Feb 28 1992 08:30 | 17 |
| re - 1
Perhaps the 15.4% is the maximum rate under his proposal. I assumed
constant rates in the earlier examples for simplicity.
Anyway, the big news. Yesterday, the House passed its certain-to-be-
vetoed tax bill with the vaunted MIDDLE CLASS TAX CUT (for two years)
and the SURTAX ON MILLIONAIRES (permanently). If reflected in lowered
withholding rates, it could mean up to $8 a week for a family.
I was glad to hear that Representative Barney Frank (D. - Taxachusetts)
said on WBZ radio that the cut "doesn't stimulate the economy" and in
fact nothing in the overall bill represented any short-term help. The
whole thing was mostly an exercise in "fairness."
In his commentary on the subject, well-known commentator Joe Bob
Sorrells said the whole thing was an exercise in "politics."
|
62.43 | Sorry, I have been away and missed most of the fun, so... | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Tue Mar 03 1992 22:48 | 22 |
| Re .27? (nationwide VAT)
But Bush et al (polititions) want to "put money in our pockets"
to INCREASE consumption to revitalize the economy.
Having a saving ethic, and a rational, which VAT (if that was all)
could be, easier to administer and harder to cheat tax, and reduced
government spending ( would need to lay off most of the IRS),
why, "That's positivly un-American,
I better run out and get a few more credit cards, gotta make next
months payments some how }8-)}
--------
Really, a simple tax, requiring less points of administration (not x
billion personal returns, just a few million business returns) would
probably straighten out a lot of this mess. But, the govenrment system
would have to be rational also. Any suggestions there ?
Bill
|
62.44 | exit | STOKES::NEVIN | | Tue Mar 10 1992 11:46 | 17 |
| re .43
VAT sounds good on paper. If it replaced the income tax, it would
replace a lot of the BS that goes into tax preparation, catching tax
fraud, writing and re-writing the tax laws, etc. The problem is that
our govt is far from rational, and if a VAT was imposed it would be in
addition to the income tax, so the total tax rate goes up, the govt has
to spend more money for people to collect the VAT, in addition to the
whole IRS system, and the whole thing gets more complicated.
The VAT is basically an income tax, only collected as the income is
going out. If it was introduced without eliminating the income tax, it
would basically give the govt another hidden means of hiking the
already outrageous taxes that we pay now.
Bob
|
62.45 | Re .44 | DEMING::SORRELLS | | Tue Mar 10 1992 17:10 | 13 |
| <<< SUBWAY::DISK$D1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MARKET_INVESTING.NOTE;1 >>>
>Note 62.44 The middle class and tax policy 44 of 44
>STOKES::NEVIN The problem is that
> our govt is far from rational, and if a VAT was imposed it would be in
> addition to the income tax, so the total tax rate goes up, the govt has
> to spend more money for people to collect the VAT, in addition to the
> whole IRS system, and the whole thing gets more complicated.
Bob has correctly revealed the logic used in the United States
Government (all branches & parties). And to add insult to injury,
they would probably call the thing "The Tax Fairness and
Simplification For the Forgotten Middle Class Act of 1994"
|