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When you use words like "most" and "the % of..." you should post numbers. The quote tells you EXACTLY where they got the 4.7% figure from. A single person with a decent income gets hit the hardest on taxes. That same person with children, mortgage interest, education expenses, etc. can have an effective taxe rate of 0% (just ask Paul). I don't disagree that the rich use accountants and deductions not used by Joe average $50k/year. However, if you think that a ball player, actor, business owner or hot shot banker, attorney or plastic surgeon earning $5mil a year has some magical offshore bank account into which their earnings are paid and not taxed, you are off your rocker. |
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And my point was, plenty of "rich" people could easily bring their effective rate down below mine, by using creative deductions. The more assets you own, and the more business endeavors you're involved in, the more likely you or your accountant will be able to dream up "creative" deductions. Quote:
Bottom line is, I don't feel sorry for rich people. They have more freedom & opportunity to GET rich in this country than practically any other. |
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To get below the 28% bracket, your AGI would have to be below $82,400 (Single, year 2010). Deductions, creative accounting, etc., your average $1mil plus earner is not paying taxes on $82k or less of income. Quote:
Same goes for poor people. Ain't this country great? :pat: |
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For me, it comes down to this... it's unfair to FORCE people to pay more, just because they have more. Asking is one thing... Stealing is another. |
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http://www.truthandpolitics.org/top-rates.php |
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What's your point? Just like you didn't pay 28% on your entire income. |
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The government shouldn't have the ability to enforce current tax laws (however unfair they may seem)? Because that seems to be all that's happening. Don't like the laws? Work to change them. |
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The somewhat more relevant number is your effective tax rate, the percentage of taxes you paid out of your taxable income, and that isn't perfect either. Compare two people with the same family situation and income. Dude 1 (D1) contributes nothing to his 401k while Dude 2 (D2) contributes 10% of his pre-tax income. D1 will have a higher effective tax rate due to his own decision. Say D1 also rents while D2 bought real estate through a mortgage. D1 can't deduct anything while D2 can deduct the interest, property tax, and some other expenses he pays. Those to factors alone, and there are a ton of them, can affect the taxable income between the two by $10,000, $20,0000, or even more despite their gross income being the same. Additionally that money will be taxed in the top one or two brackets they are subjected to, meaning it will make the largest difference in their effective tax rates. In the above scenario D1 isn't getting screwed by the government. He can end up with significantly more tax liability than D2 and has nothing to blame other than his own decisions. |
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The idea that someone should buy a home just because of the deduction opportunities is rather lacking (although I doubt that's what you actually think). I see your point about 401k's though. Those contributions, along with the standard deduction and personal deduction, are going to be a much bigger benefit to a middle class person than they would to a rich person. |
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