T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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364.1 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Follow *that*, Killer | Mon Sep 10 1990 07:40 | 4 |
| 'progressive taxation' = 'the more you make the more they take'
A variant on the 'sock the rich' theme that plays so well among
the envious.
|
364.2 | Sock the poor is much more common | MLTVAX::DUNNE | | Mon Sep 10 1990 11:22 | 11 |
| "Sock the rich" also plays well among the poor, who are the ones
who have been socked the most during the Reagan years.
While there was no money for pre-natal care for poor women (Chicago,
for instance, has an infant-mortality rate comparable to that of
Third World countries), people in the upper-income tax brackets
were getting income-tax cuts of 50 percent. Not only that, but
when these women bear unhelathy children, it then costs millions
of dollars in medical care to save their lives.
Eileen
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364.3 | I can understand a sliding-scale, but the reverse? | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | NYC to host Celebration '94!! | Mon Sep 10 1990 12:01 | 7 |
|
I've never understood this... why is it unfair to tax everyone in
the middle to higher incomes at the same rate? Why does the tax
rate decrease for incomes over $150K or whatever the higher cutoff
is - what's the reasoning for it?
-Erik
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364.4 | | SNOBRD::CONLIFFE | Cthulhu Barata Nikto | Mon Sep 10 1990 12:23 | 12 |
| One cynical comment
|
| I've never understood this... why is it unfair to tax everyone in
| the middle to higher incomes at the same rate? Why does the tax
| rate decrease for incomes over $150K or whatever the higher cutoff
| is - what's the reasoning for it?
I've always understood the reasoning to be that most laws are made by
people with incomes above $150K.
Nigel
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364.5 | Further explanation | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | Take a Hike...join the AMC | Mon Sep 10 1990 13:42 | 4 |
| The rate of taxation for the higher income bracket is in the proper
relationship to those of lower income. The inequity comes in the
taxing of earned income vs. unearned income and the variety of
loopholes that a person with a large spendable income has.
|
364.6 | Even more curious... | CYCLST::DEBRIAE | NYC to host Celebration '94!! | Mon Sep 10 1990 16:44 | 16 |
| >The rate of taxation for the higher income bracket is in the proper
>relationship to those of lower income.
Huh? That one really threw me for a loop.
Having people who earn less than a minimum income pay less taxes I
can understand. It makes sense under the principle of "Everyone
pays their percentage share, except those who are not as fortunate
as most are allowed to pay less on a sliding scale." That I
understand.
Why a reverse sliding-scale for those with much larger than average
incomes? Was there ever any reasoning explained for this?
-Erik [who's glad he never became an economist :-)]
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364.7 | Progressive vs. Regressive taxes | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Mon Sep 10 1990 16:48 | 36 |
| "Progressive" and "Regressive" are technical terms in taxation with
relatively precise definitions.
A progressive tax is a tax which takes a larger percentage as income
(e.g) increases.
A regressive tax is one that affects people with less (income) to a
greater degree.
Traditionally "flat rate" taxes are regressive because they impose a larger
tax burden on poorer people than richer. The reason is that for any given
income poorer people pay a larger percentage of their incomes for fixed
living expensese (food, shelter, transportation) than do richer people.
Since these costs are fixed for all people, a flat rate tax on all income
imposes a bigger burden on someone making less money. As an example, let's
assume everyone has $5000 in fixed living expenses, and there is a flat 20%
income tax. Someone making $10000 would pay $2000 in taxes, and $5000 fixed
living expenses, leaving $3000 disposable income. Someone making $100000
would owe $10000 in taxes. That combined with $5000 in fixed living
expenses leavess them with $85000. Doubling the tax rate to 40% leaves the
first person with only $1000 and the second person with $75000.
>>>> RATHOLE ALERT <<<< >>>> RATHOLE ALERT <<<<
Lotteries (to pick one of my favorite examples) are very regressive for a
number of reasons. First, they attract the less educated who are usually
poorer (sometimes cynically and unfairly called a "Tax on stupidity"),
secondly they come off the top of disposable income, which as we see above
affects the poor disproportionately - $10 a week may be pocket change to a
rich engineer, but not to a poor family. Last, it is a tax on the hopeless,
who see it as a means to escape from their condition. I hate lotteries,
unfortunately I hate governmental prohibitions even more. There are no easy
answers.
-- Charles
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364.8 | Nit | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Mon Sep 10 1990 17:18 | 7 |
| I would disagree with the statement that "living expenses" are fixed regardless
of income, unless you define "living expenses" as "that which is necessary to
keep you from starving to death and living on a heating grate, but nothing
more".
However, it is certainly true that they don't increase in proportion with
income.
|