maxiep
RIP Dr. Jack
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2008
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It means start slacking off and enjoy life instead of going for dat money!
This Obama tax hike raises my taxes 36% on $60K per year.
Wonderful.
That may be enough to give up the house.
This Obama tax hike raises my taxes 36% on $60K per year.
Wonderful.
That may be enough to give up the house.
No kidding. Time to quit and go work as a greeter at WalMart.
If Congress fails to act to extend the
Bush tax cuts, your income tax burden
will be $1,509 higher in 2011.
I did really well under "Obama`s Budget" though


Income Tax if All Bush Tax Cuts Expire:
$39,600,000,169,121
Income Tax if Bush Tax Cuts are Extended:
$34,999,999,813,781
Income Tax under Obama's Tax Proposals:
$39,600,000,176,021
If Congress fails to act to extend the
Bush tax cuts, your income tax burden
will be $4,600,000,355,340 higher in 2011.
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No kidding--under Obama's budget, I will (allegedly) have no tax liabiilty. And that's pre-fellatio, too.![]()
What does the expiration of the Bush Tax Cuts mean to you?
To me it means people making over $250,000 will be paying more taxes.
Damn, seems like its a even worse hit if you are married
doesnt look like thats a smart decision now....
Run a scenario where you make less than $250K as a married couple or $200K as an individual. Those people will be paying more too.
My point is, don't believe everything you hear.
I only tried 6 or 8 such scenarios, but every one came back with either equal or lower taxes under Obama's proposal than for the extended Bush cuts.
barfo
That's a proposal and not what's on the table to happen. Under the "maxiep proposal" my taxes go down much more than any of the existing scenarios, but it's still fantasy.
Peter Hooper at Deutsche believes that an end of the Bush tax cuts could remove a full 2.5% form U.S. GDP in 2011. This could be enough to kill the economic recovery:
Deutsche Bank:
We assess the potential for fiscal drag over the year ahead based on (1) an update of the impending unwinding of the Obama stimulus program (ARRA), and (2) alternative scenarios for extension of the Bush tax cuts. If a political stalemate in Washington results in no extension, fiscal drag could reach 2.5% of GDP next year, enough to bring a sluggish recovery to the stalling point. This includes 1% drag from unwinding of ARRA, 1% from scheduled tax increases as the cuts expire at the end of 2010, and 0.5% from failure to pass a fix for the Alternative Minimum Tax.
If the Administration’s tax extension package is passed, the drag in 2011 will fall to a bit less than 1.5%, and if the Republican across-the-board extension passes, it will fall to around 1%. Either way, we think that pent-up private demand would be sufficient to keep a moderate recovery going.
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/deut...end-of-the-bush-tax-cuts-2010-7#ixzz0v7DEJDDE
So what exactly did you mean by "run a scenario", then?
barfo
That can't possibly be right. You and several others here have repeatedly said the stimulus had no effect. Therefore, how can the expiration of the stimulus possibly cause a decline in GDP?
I'll also note that the summary is quite misleading when it says "Peter Hooper at Deutsche believes that an end of the Bush tax cuts could remove a full 2.5% form U.S. GDP in 2011."
The quoted text shows that Deutsche said the tax cut expiration would cause a 1% decline.
barfo
There's one current tax policy, which is due to expire at the end of the year. January 1, 2011 there will be a new tax policy if nothing is done. Anything else is a scenario until something is negotiated. For the record, I think it's dangerous to only increase taxes on the wealthy. If you get to a point where less than 50% of people who are eligable to pay taxes are actually paying them, then they form a natural bloc which votes in representatives that only continue to tax the minority. IMO if there's a tax increase, everyone should have their taxes raised, even if it's only a few dollars. With tax policy, everyone should have skin in the game.
maxiep said:Run a scenario where you make less than $250K as a married couple or $200K as an individual. Those people will be paying more too.
My point is, don't believe everything you hear.
That $800B stimulus package was 6% of our $14T GDP, yet produced 1% of GDP. You really want to go there?
