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The fiscal cliff
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The Democrats plan will cost us quite a bit. Dh was crying over $1000/mo. Maybe he got it wrong...~Mom of 5, married to an ID doc
~A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss
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The thing is.... those multi-millionaires will still have their offshore accounts, investment income and loopholes. My guess is they won't pay more. We will...and dh is working mire and harder for less pay. I feel stressed and unhappy. Im double-checking dh's estimate.~Mom of 5, married to an ID doc
~A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss
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Originally posted by GrayMatterWife View PostI am just getting really tired of people conflating raising taxes with raising revenue.Alison
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Originally posted by PrincessFiona View PostThe Democrats plan will cost us quite a bit. Dh was crying over $1000/mo. Maybe he got it wrong...
If you look at bobk's link, there's a link on that page to the calculator they used to create their graphic. There, you can input your own family's figures and compare between: 2012 tax law, 2013 tax law (the fiscal cliff), the Democratic plan, and the Republican plan. I'm going to go put in our 2011 figures and see what it would mean for us...Last edited by spotty_dog; 12-05-2012, 03:11 PM.Alison
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Originally posted by spotty_dog View PostHm, could you explain? I think it seems fairly reasonable to intermix the two in any given conversation, given that tax receipts (corporate, personal income, payroll, and excise taxes) account for some 94% of federal revenues? http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/brief...rs/revenue.cfm
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Originally posted by spotty_dog View PostHm, could you explain? I think it seems fairly reasonable to intermix the two in any given conversation, given that tax receipts (corporate, personal income, payroll, and excise taxes) account for some 94% of federal revenues? http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/brief...rs/revenue.cfm
People are going to be pissed in the end. Most people's retirement, in one way or another, rests on American capitalism via 401Ks, etc. What happens when corporations are taxed more? Nothing good for your retirement. But, of course, that is a fantastic way to grow government control and dependency.Last edited by GrayMatterWife; 12-05-2012, 04:22 PM.
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Originally posted by bobk View PostI believe she's just saying that raising taxes does not guarantee more money for the government. Raising taxes creates disincentives to earn more and make investments, which put other people to work who pay taxes. The net effect is that the government brings in less revenue (these losses exceed any gains made by the tax increase).
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Originally posted by bobk View PostI believe she's just saying that raising taxes does not guarantee more money for the government. Raising taxes creates disincentives to earn more and make investments, which put other people to work who pay taxes. The net effect is that the government brings in less revenue (these losses exceed any gains made by the tax increase).Alison
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Originally posted by PrincessFiona View PostThe thing is.... those multi-millionaires will still have their offshore accounts, investment income and loopholes. My guess is they won't pay more. We will...and dh is working mire and harder for less pay. I feel stressed and unhappy. Im double-checking dh's estimate.
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Originally posted by spotty_dog View PostYes, that makes sense that the two can't be interchanged perfectly. However, I don't buy that increased tax rates will always have the effect of a net loss in revenues.
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Originally posted by GrayMatterWife View PostI believe economics, math and human nature. And history.
Oh, here, instead of me picking over historical tables from the Office of Management and Budget, here's a report from the Department of Treasury about historic tax bills and their revenue effects: http://www.treasury.gov/resource-cen...ents/ota81.pdf
But really, as the article said that I posted earlier, asking whether we should raise or lower taxes, enact austerity or provide stimulus, is like asking whether a car should turn right or left. It depends on where the car is and where it's going. But it seems pretty solidly supported to state that WHEN the economy is in a recession, THEN we should provide stimulus and cut taxes. However, when tax rates on the wealthiest individuals are already pretty darned low...the top tax bracket used to be 70%!...then I find it very hard to swallow a need to cut them further.Alison
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Once again, this thread has had me looking for a "like" button on many post. Carry on, all.Angie
Gyn-Onc fellowship survivor - 10 years out of the training years; reluctant suburbanite
Mom to DS (18) and DD (15) (and many many pets)
"Where are we going - and what am I doing in this handbasket?"
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