Wingnut
Veteran Member
Just read an interesting article in the papers ... well, interesting to me, when I hear all the knee-jerk folks blaming this on the current administration.
"We got to this point through a combination of forces. The tax reforms of the Clinton years made the revenue system more progressive; that is, higher-income people paid more of the bills. And growing income inequality - the tenencies of the well-educated and highly skilled to make incresing multiples of what the less-educated and unskilled receive - compounded that effect.
As a result, the top 1% of taxpayers now furnish more than 1/3rd of the income tax receipts; the top 5% pay more than half; and the top 50% pay all but a small portion - 4% - of what the government receives in personal income taxes."
It goes on to say that the government made out like gangbusters during the 90's with all the high-income people getting soaked with capital gains and the like.
And now? Well, hmmm .... stock losses are gonna hit the budget hard. And I mean HARD.
And what are our highly paid "political leaders" doing about this .... well, they're ignoring the budget (Gephard and Dashle don't have time for the budget) and trying to raise taxes so that the senior citizens can get drugs from Canada.
Golly-gee, am I glad to see that. I was worried they'd be spending time earning their pay instead.
What I enjoyed the most this morning on the political talk shows was the laws that are being formulated to deal with Stock Options and how companies will now have to declare them as an expense ... changing their earnings.
OK ... someone educate me if I'm totally out-to-lunch here (yes, even you, Chuck) ... but ... aren't stock options nothing, nada, zilch, nichts unless they are used at some future time. How do you declare an expense (which is also a tax deduction in the industries that I work with ... an expense is a deduction during the current year) when you have created nothing except a potential sale of stock in the future.
And question number two -while this looks bad to those that don't have stock options - why is the government so upset (except on the basis of throweing christians to the lions) since they person who exercises a stock option is immediately liable for the difference between what they paid and what the stock is valued at on the "option day"??
Disclaimer ... I never have and never will receive stock options ... I ain't and never will be ... nor want to be ... that high up the corporate ladder.
"We got to this point through a combination of forces. The tax reforms of the Clinton years made the revenue system more progressive; that is, higher-income people paid more of the bills. And growing income inequality - the tenencies of the well-educated and highly skilled to make incresing multiples of what the less-educated and unskilled receive - compounded that effect.
As a result, the top 1% of taxpayers now furnish more than 1/3rd of the income tax receipts; the top 5% pay more than half; and the top 50% pay all but a small portion - 4% - of what the government receives in personal income taxes."
It goes on to say that the government made out like gangbusters during the 90's with all the high-income people getting soaked with capital gains and the like.
And now? Well, hmmm .... stock losses are gonna hit the budget hard. And I mean HARD.
And what are our highly paid "political leaders" doing about this .... well, they're ignoring the budget (Gephard and Dashle don't have time for the budget) and trying to raise taxes so that the senior citizens can get drugs from Canada.
Golly-gee, am I glad to see that. I was worried they'd be spending time earning their pay instead.
What I enjoyed the most this morning on the political talk shows was the laws that are being formulated to deal with Stock Options and how companies will now have to declare them as an expense ... changing their earnings.
OK ... someone educate me if I'm totally out-to-lunch here (yes, even you, Chuck) ... but ... aren't stock options nothing, nada, zilch, nichts unless they are used at some future time. How do you declare an expense (which is also a tax deduction in the industries that I work with ... an expense is a deduction during the current year) when you have created nothing except a potential sale of stock in the future.
And question number two -while this looks bad to those that don't have stock options - why is the government so upset (except on the basis of throweing christians to the lions) since they person who exercises a stock option is immediately liable for the difference between what they paid and what the stock is valued at on the "option day"??
Disclaimer ... I never have and never will receive stock options ... I ain't and never will be ... nor want to be ... that high up the corporate ladder.