RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (Full Version)

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QuietlySeeking -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/19/2007 5:41:19 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: subfever

The Bill Gates and Oprah Winfreys of this world are but a small fraction of the super-rich, and only serve to perpetuate a grand illusion when used to point out an example such as yours.  

The wealth of the elite is rarely the product of free enterprise and the free market alone. It comes by operating within and exploiting a network of government supports, such as licenses, regulations, subsidies, and contracts. It is the product of a sort of giveaway.

Having even more wealth than they had before, the very rich can thus buy even more government supports and giveaways and acquire even more wealth, enabling them to buy even more government supports and giveaways. And so on.

The result of the elite buying public policies is a vicious cycle, which transfers ever greater wealth and power to the very rich and away from everyone else.


Hmm, let's see....why not check out the Forbes 100...only about 15 aren't self-made or inherited from self-made billionaires/millionaires.  Yep....that's elitist.




subfever -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/20/2007 12:13:58 PM)

In my admittedly somewhat brief search, I was unable to find a U.S. list, but the international list presented itself quickly enough. May I assume that you're referring to the international list?

Do you believe that everyone who is financially qualified is on that list?




Thadius -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/20/2007 12:24:06 PM)

*fast reply

I had an economics professor once tell us that if all of the worlds money were divided evenly amongst every individual (wealth redistribution) that those that have it now would eventually wind up with the majority of it again, because of their nature and ways of thinking.

The class warfare game is about to hit full cycle, especially with the various politicians jockeying for position.  The answer is not to make people 'equal' by restraining those that excel, but by teaching those that fall behind to keep up.




subfever -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/20/2007 12:34:17 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Thadius

*fast reply

I had an economics professor once tell us that if all of the worlds money were divided evenly amongst every individual (wealth redistribution) that those that have it now would eventually wind up with the majority of it again, because of their nature and ways of thinking.

The class warfare game is about to hit full cycle, especially with the various politicians jockeying for position.  The answer is not to make people 'equal' by restraining those that excel, but by teaching those that fall behind to keep up.



I was hoping you were going to say that the answer is leveling the playing field.




NorthernGent -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/20/2007 12:38:42 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Thadius

*fast reply

I had an economics professor once tell us that if all of the worlds money were divided evenly amongst every individual (wealth redistribution) that those that have it now would eventually wind up with the majority of it again, because of their nature and ways of thinking.

The class warfare game is about to hit full cycle, especially with the various politicians jockeying for position.  The answer is not to make people 'equal' by restraining those that excel, but by teaching those that fall behind to keep up.



The problem is, in order for people to keep up they need the opportunity to do so. Humans are like plants - give them the conditions to grow and they'll bloom, cut off the supply and they'll wither.




subfever -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/20/2007 12:42:55 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: NorthernGent

quote:

ORIGINAL: Thadius

*fast reply

I had an economics professor once tell us that if all of the worlds money were divided evenly amongst every individual (wealth redistribution) that those that have it now would eventually wind up with the majority of it again, because of their nature and ways of thinking.

The class warfare game is about to hit full cycle, especially with the various politicians jockeying for position.  The answer is not to make people 'equal' by restraining those that excel, but by teaching those that fall behind to keep up.



The problem is, in order for people to keep up they need the opportunity to do so. Humans are like plants - give them the conditions to grow and they'll bloom, cut off the supply and they'll wither.


And what happens when you spoon feed them Jerry Springer, Survivor, and Jackass? ... [;)]




Thadius -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/20/2007 12:48:53 PM)

The question then becomes the supply of what?  There are many politicians and preachers that have made their livings (very wealthy ones at that) by keeping the lower income classes where they are, through fear mongering, the blame game, and other tactics.  The war on drugs, the war against cancer, and the war against poverty will not see any cures, there is far more money to be made from treating the symptoms than coming up with a solution.

Thadius




subfever -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/20/2007 1:23:07 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Thadius

The question then becomes the supply of what?  There are many politicians and preachers that have made their livings (very wealthy ones at that) by keeping the lower income classes where they are, through fear mongering, the blame game, and other tactics.  The war on drugs, the war against cancer, and the war against poverty will not see any cures, there is far more money to be made from treating the symptoms than coming up with a solution.

Thadius


And that's what it's been all about; indoctrinating a gullible public into believing in fast, band-aid like treatments for whatever symptoms ail us.

When's the last time we've heard anyone from the political, medical, or law enforcement establishments propose treating the cause of anything?

Why is it that technology has exploded over these past 50 years in almost all areas except cures for disease?

There's more profit in creating new drugs and advanced surgery procedures, building more jails, and creating new and bigger government programs and entitlements to "help" the people.  




Amaros -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/22/2007 5:19:23 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: QuietlySeeking

Get the facts straight...
1.  the portion that the minimum wage earner is responsible for is 7.5% not 15%.  The employer is responsible for the other 7.5%.  The only people who are responsible for the full 15% is those who are not W-2, which is normally NOT minimum wage earners.

It is generally accepted in economics that much as in other costs, the employers half o the payroll tax is "passed on" to the consumer, and in this case, the worker - i.e., it is likely that were the employer not required to pay half the payoll tax, it would free up capital for higher wages.

quote:

ORIGINAL: QuietlySeeking

2.  Social Security may be a tax, but it is not calculated into the funds that the IRS collects.  The Congress actually decides who gets that money...unfortunately, the Congress has decided to "borrow" money from the SSA to make the federal budget. 

No, income taxes are referred to as "general revenues", and includes a few odd excise taxes, meant to pay "on budget" expenses: pay for federal workers, military expenditures, interest on the private debt, and miscellaneous congressional programs, foreign aid, etc..

Income taxes plus payroll taxes are referred to as "total revenues", or "the unified budget", but payroll taxes are not collected by the IRS to my knowledge.

When Clinton-Gore announced a surplus in the unified budget, the wing nuts all started screaming that it meant income taxes were too high - in fact the surplus was in payroll taxes, not income taxes. In short, the Bush tax cuts are funded with payroll taxes, there never was any surplus in general revenues, although Clinton Gore did manage to balance on budget expenditures with general revenues.

This is in fact what created the surplus, since SS has been in the Black since it's inception, wheras the general federal budget has been in the red for the last thirty years or so, congress has been borrowing the money from surplus SS revenues to pay for the overdrafts in the federal budget - when the general budget was balanced, and excess appeaared in the unified budget projections, from excess payroll taxes.

Again, when republicans bitch about taxes, claiming that taxes are 20% of GDP, they are referring to total revenues, not income taxes which were about 12% of GDP at their high under Clinton - this was part of a bi-partisan effort to control the debt, and taxes were being cut under Clinton Gore as the debt was brought under control.

quote:

ORIGINAL: QuietlySeeking

3.  The majority of the wealth that is controlled by that top 20% resides here in the U.S. is by persons who have worked VERY hard to get what they've got (or by the descendents of those people).  Would you trade 16 hour days 6-7 days a week for 15 years for the billions of dollars that people like Bill Gates or Oprah Winfrey has accumulated?  Personally, I'll be happy on what I make and how many hours I work to make it.  I spoke with my CEO's son once about his dad's work habits which is anecdotally how I came up with the 16 / 6-7 / 15 figures mentioned above.

...with a little help from the fed. In the Eighties for example, the Fed tightened up the money supply in order to end the inflationary cycle begun by the Kennedy tax cuts - i.e., the demand pull inflation Laffer failed to predict. So far, so good, except that Fed policy since has been a tight money policy, period, and any hint of inflation above 3% or so and interest rates go up.

They maintained a stranglehold on the money supply until almost 1986, long after the inflationary spiral was under control, but by that time, the bulk of the family farms in America had gone bankrupt, the "Strong dollar" having killed agricultural exports. They were bought out for back taxes by agribussiness, who got record breaking subsidies from this administration.

A similar thing happened after the civil war, although in that instance the federal government paid off the war debt in record time which knocked the bottom out of the commodities market, and wiped out all the sharecroppers who had just been put into business under Lincoln - agribussiness again, with mechanization, small plot farming had given way to monoculture, houses were burned and bulldozed, and the relatively self sufficient rural population driven into the cities.

Similarly the S&L scandal was basically a smash and grab - CEO's bankrupted select S&L's, giving out bad loans to friends and overbuilding commercial property - when congress liquidated these S&L's, these same investors turned around and bought them out lock, stock and Barrel for a fraction of what they were worth - again, the taxpayers footed the bill.

Real estate fraud was a particular specialty of the Reagan administration, if the steady stream of indictments is any indication - which included the SoI, and the HUD sec. building gated communites on properties and with funds set aside for low income housing development.  Catherine Fitt's goes so far as to accuse the Bush administration of funneling cocaine into the inner city to drive down property and default rates - take it or leave it, the CIA was running cocaine, that much is verified and a matter of public record, and a lot of people got rich off the building boom that crack made possible.

This makes it all the more egregious when republicans make the claim that the top one percent are hard working small business owners, not fat moguls - which is true, except that we're not talking about them, or highly paid athletes, university presidents, etc., we're talking about the top 1/2 of 1%, with incomes in excess of a mill - which the IRS does not keep seperate records on.

The house you live in is owned by the bank, who owns the bank?

Bottom line is, when you control the wealth, you're gonna make money regardless - wealth isn't just money in the bank it's capital, it's the "means of production" - everything you buy, everything you eat, every dime you spend finds it's way back to whoever controls the wealth - every time you flush the toilet, somebody makes money.

It's neither here nor there, that's the way the world works, but to turn around and pretend you don't benefit from the government, have no obligation to the community, and piss and moan about buying milk for some kids... well, I already told you, the top 1% has seen a 17% decline in income, that is the fact. Hard working? Maybe. Smart? I don't think so.

Oh, and look up the figures on hours worked - the family income gains that Reagan worshippers crow about weren't because people were better off, it was because they were working longer hours, and the single income household dissapeared - nobody can afford to live on a single income, most not on a single job - the biggest single indicator for living below poverty level is whether the household has one income or two.

quote:

ORIGINAL: QuietlySeeking

4.  The thread wasn't necessarily how we *spend* the money, but how we get the money.  I'll agree that the spending policies and taxation sucks.


Anything specific there, or just generic bitching?

quote:

ORIGINAL: QuietlySeeking

5. The proportion of non-income-based taxes (regressive taxes like sales tax) that people pay works out to about the same percentage of income from the highest to lowest tax brackets because rich people buy more expensive "stuff".  As a percentage of income, sales tax (and other 'regressive' taxes) actually becomes a "flat tax".


According to...

Not the rich people I know, they're stingy bastards, that's how they got rich - maybe your nouveau riche silicon valley buddies, but watch yer back, these guys hate the information revolution, thay can't keep up which is why they have to scam the taxpayers - they can't compete on a level playing field.

quote:

ORIGINAL: QuietlySeeking

And you aren't taking into account actual market rates....here in Atlanta,GA the actual rate that someone working at low-end jobs is around $8.25 an hour.  Hmm, it seems market pressures HAVE made a higher "minimum wage".


Depends on the labor market where you are, supply and demand - as I say, nobody can live on minimum wage, much less find time to "improve themselves".

Also, in America, about 50% of profits go to inputs, i.e., expenses to keep firms operating, materials, energy, etc., the remaining half split about evenly between labor and managment - globally, the figure is more likely to be between 60/40, and 70/30 in favor of labor, and American firms typically lay off workers rather than cut managment compensation or stockholder dividends. Partially this is because top mangment often get's the bulk of their compensation in the form of stock options, which is why CEO of companies that lose money still make exorbitant haul off huge bonuses - stock options incentivize playing games with stock prices rather than maximising value and productivity.




popeye1250 -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/22/2007 7:06:01 PM)

I just wish the Congress would stop spending money we don't have.
And Social Security should be totally seperate so that they can't get their hands on it.
There's all kinds of things in the budget that can be cut especially "foreign aid."




Archer -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/22/2007 11:58:41 PM)

Last figurees I saw for minimum wage had just over 500,000 people in the entire US being paid at the minimum wage $5.15 an hour, out of how many million working folks, I forget. Of those 500,000 over half were students or those fresh out of high school. Most of the rest of the jobs at that same pay ar held as second jobs etc.

You're not supposed to be trying to support a family on minimum wage in the first place minimum wage is for those unable to do anything more than walk and chew gum. If you are in a job that pays minimum and can't get a raise within 3-6 months then odds are you are a pretty bad employee. Labor responds to supply and demand as well, and for the most part the fact that we had 500,000 or so folks out of the tens of millions of employed people in this nation tells me supply and demand in employement is working. The problem is the labor market is shifting faster than the attitudes workers have about the jobs.
40 years ago you could expect a mill/ plant/ foundry job to be a lifetime employment. today the jobs that are required by the market are shifting fast. If you don't keep up with the skills in demand you're going to have problems. But there are still folks screaming about textile mill jobs when the supply and demand told us 30 years ago that the mills would be closing and yet hundreds of young men and woment took jobs in those mills instead of getting educations and skills for upcomming fields of employment right up until today in some of those towns.

If you make the right choices you can be at least middle class in this country within a generation of poverty. If you make the wrong choices you can have generations who will remain in poverty.







NeedToUseYou -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 12:44:32 AM)

What I find funny in all these debates is that everyone is always wanting someone else to pay more taxes than another group. Fact is everyone is over taxed. We get very very little return on our multithousand dollar investment in government corp.. Really, come on, I personally, have profited thousands of dollars off blatant government waste. And so I have to laugh and gag at anyone saying the government needs more money from anyone, and can't balance itself with less. Computers right? Okay every state and federal agency uses them, then cycle them out. I've bought boxes of new in package laptop batteries for a 1.00 each from the government and sold them for 50.00 each, these batteries even with preferred governmnet rates would be nearly 90.00 dollars a pop(Ni-cads, lithiums, etc... don't go bad unless they have a charge in them). That wasteful exchange alone was about 5,000.00 the government trashed. I have bought 3 year old cisco servers, very high end shit, that cost new 100000+ dollars for 5.00 dollars. LOL. And nothing is wrong with it and there is no way it actually needed to be replaced, because of work load. These are fibre channel routers/load balancers/etc.. the size of refrigerators. But the way government works is if you don't spend your budget this year and act like you need all the current money you'll get less next year. Oh, and have bought P4 systems that were a year old and the video card was just loose, LOL, for 1.00, because it was "broke". Give me a break.

The government is a wasteful mess from top to bottom. Everyone is paying to much taxes that is where the focus should be. They have plenty if they wanted to use it wisely and efficiently like everyone else is expected to do.




swtnsparkling -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 2:12:31 AM)

I think  Trump-Oprah and Bill Gates should pay all our taxes for at least a year. ( They have enough money to cover it) Then we all could maybe get some money banked...

No. I'm not serious
( I can dream lol)




Amaros -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 4:52:17 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

Last figurees I saw for minimum wage had just over 500,000 people in the entire US being paid at the minimum wage $5.15 an hour, out of how many million working folks, I forget. Of those 500,000 over half were students or those fresh out of high school. Most of the rest of the jobs at that same pay ar held as second jobs etc.

You're not supposed to be trying to support a family on minimum wage in the first place minimum wage is for those unable to do anything more than walk and chew gum. If you are in a job that pays minimum and can't get a raise within 3-6 months then odds are you are a pretty bad employee. Labor responds to supply and demand as well, and for the most part the fact that we had 500,000 or so folks out of the tens of millions of employed people in this nation tells me supply and demand in employement is working. The problem is the labor market is shifting faster than the attitudes workers have about the jobs.


It would also include most of Wal-Marts full time employees, since they typically find a reason to fire people jsut before they have five years in and are fully vested in the benfits program, most convenience stores/gas stations, most part time jobs period, i.e., the kind that are availalable to single mothers, etc. - and if you've never worked in a convenience store, take my word, it's the most underpaid job in America, it oughta come with combat pay.

Wages have only gone up recently because with the baby boomers aging and the flow of immigrants across the border slowed down a bit, demand goes up - still, I'd say average wages for unskilled and semiskilled labor that are above minimum, are only just about where minimum wage ought to be. Most supermarkets are unionized.

If wages begin to increase, and threaten to cause inflation, the Fed will bump up interest rates and there will be layoffs.




Amaros -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 5:02:57 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: NeedToUseYou

The government is a wasteful mess from top to bottom. Everyone is paying to much taxes that is where the focus should be. They have plenty if they wanted to use it wisely and efficiently like everyone else is expected to do.



Absolutely: Republicans seem to think they can go in and cut social programs, and save a bunch of money - you can't do it, because it isn't the big stuff that's the problem, it's the nickle and dime stuff that adds up. In one audit, there was like a Trillion dollars the Pentagon couldn't account for, there's 9 Billion missing in Iraq alone.

Everybody laughed at Gore when he was making them replace glass ashtrays with plastic ones, but that is the problem - there's no accountability or oversight when it comes to spending. You can't go in, make some big cuts, and walk away - it's a constant, ongoing process, you have to make a bunch of little cuts every single day.

When I was in the Nav, electric carts were being stolen off the trucks, and then resold to the government - i.e., the same equipment was being purchased two or three times over - not all government employees are crooks, but without whistle blower protections - gutted by the Bush administration - it's basically an open field for the rackets.





EnglishDomNW -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 5:13:19 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: QuietlySeeking

It may not be the best system in the world, but it's the only one where people can truly change from one "class" to another.


Can you explain to me how the same thing isn't possible in practically every democracy on earth?  I'm just curious why you say that.




farglebargle -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 5:17:53 PM)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_federal_budget,_2007

* $1.1 trillion (+12.1%) - Individual income tax
* $884.1 billion (+7.4%) - Social Security and other payroll taxes
* $260.6 billion (+15.5%) - Corporate income tax
* $74.6 billion (-1.3%) - Excise taxes
* $28.1 billion (+0.7%) - Customs duties
* $23.7 billion (-9.2%) - Estate and gift taxes
* $48.4 billion (+14.0%) - Other

The Corporations aren't pulling their weight. And perhaps using Excise taxes on imports might be a good idea...

That, and devolution of all non-constitutionally mandated duties to the States, and we'll have the 300 Billion dollars to build the network of solar power satellites to give us energy independence.





Sinergy -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 7:31:21 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: KenDckey

I was doing some interesting reading from the Congressional Budget Office

http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/57xx/doc5746/08-13-EffectiveFedTaxRates.pdf

Seems the top 10% of our taxpayer earners pay about 62.8% of the total tax revenues which will increase at the rate of an average of .5% per year.   The top 50% of the taxpayers pay 96.54% of our taxes.

It also appears that under current laws the low income taxpayers share continues to drop at the rate of about 1.5% peryear.

Then I read in the NY Times that when the Dems took control of the congress changed the rules by amending the super majority tax hike rule so that it can be a simple majority by having a simple majority aprove it.   The NY Times also was complaining that the tax cuts helped the rich (top 50%) more than the low income citizens.  

So What I conclude is that

1.    The Dems in congress are about to increase taxes if they can get it past a veto.
2.    The Dems in congress want to penalize the rich for not paying the other +\- 4% of the taxes the other 50% of us pay.
3.     The Dems in Congress are trying to make everyone equal in income regardless of how they acquired their money.

Whatcha think guys?




Lets see.

A random CEO makes 10 million dollars, and pays 2 million of it in taxes.

A checker at Walmart makes 29,000, and pays 9000 of it in taxes.

So yes, the CEO pays 99% of the taxes paid in our country.

Can you honestly expect the checker at Walmart to pay a higher tax burden so the CEO can buy a 140th Ferrari?

Sinergy




Archer -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 8:27:42 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: farglebargle

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_federal_budget,_2007

* $1.1 trillion (+12.1%) - Individual income tax
* $884.1 billion (+7.4%) - Social Security and other payroll taxes
* $260.6 billion (+15.5%) - Corporate income tax
* $74.6 billion (-1.3%) - Excise taxes
* $28.1 billion (+0.7%) - Customs duties
* $23.7 billion (-9.2%) - Estate and gift taxes
* $48.4 billion (+14.0%) - Other

The Corporations aren't pulling their weight. And perhaps using Excise taxes on imports might be a good idea...

That, and devolution of all non-constitutionally mandated duties to the States, and we'll have the 300 Billion dollars to build the network of solar power satellites to give us energy independence.




If you think the taxes stop there at the corporations door you're deluded, corporations don't pay taxes of any sort their customers pay them for them they are embedded taxes.No matter how high you want to raise them they will in the end be paid by the customers. The corporation is going to do one of two things raise their price until the taxes and the X% profit are still there or shut down.

If they make 8% profit now on average they will pass that tax along to the customer until they again get to the 8% profit figure.






Archer -> RE: Who Pays Our Taxes (1/23/2007 8:40:02 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Amaros

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

Last figurees I saw for minimum wage had just over 500,000 people in the entire US being paid at the minimum wage $5.15 an hour, out of how many million working folks, I forget. Of those 500,000 over half were students or those fresh out of high school. Most of the rest of the jobs at that same pay ar held as second jobs etc.

You're not supposed to be trying to support a family on minimum wage in the first place minimum wage is for those unable to do anything more than walk and chew gum. If you are in a job that pays minimum and can't get a raise within 3-6 months then odds are you are a pretty bad employee. Labor responds to supply and demand as well, and for the most part the fact that we had 500,000 or so folks out of the tens of millions of employed people in this nation tells me supply and demand in employement is working. The problem is the labor market is shifting faster than the attitudes workers have about the jobs.


It would also include most of Wal-Marts full time employees, since they typically find a reason to fire people jsut before they have five years in and are fully vested in the benfits program, most convenience stores/gas stations, most part time jobs period, i.e., the kind that are availalable to single mothers, etc. - and if you've never worked in a convenience store, take my word, it's the most underpaid job in America, it oughta come with combat pay.





CITE your source that it includes them because the BLS statistics say you are full of it as far as "Most Walmart Employees"
They might start at minimum but they don't stay there long, not saying theraise they get is huge but it isn't minimum

BLS Characteristics of minimum wage workers
  • Minimum wage workers tend to be young. About half of workers earning $5.15 or less were under age 25, and about one-fourth of workers earning at or below the minimum wage were age 16-19. Among employed teenagers, about 9 percent earned $5.15 or less. About 2 percent of workers age 25 and over earned the minimum wage or less. Among those age 65 and over, the proportion was about 3 percent.

  • Among hourly-paid workers age 16 and over, 2 percent of those who had a high school diploma but had not gone on to college earned the minimum wage or less.
  • The industry with the highest proportion of workers with reported hourly wages at or below $5.15 was leisure and hospitality (about 14 percent). About three-fifths of all workers paid at or below the Federal minimum wage were employed in this industry, primarily in the food services and drinking places component. For many of these workers, tips and commissions supplement the hourly wages received.

  • The proportion of hourly-paid workers earning the prevailing Federal minimum wage or less has trended downward since 1979, when data first began to be collected on a regular basis.
I am citing BLS data http://www.bls.gov/cps/minwage2005.htm




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