Posted on 11/30/2017 3:43:33 PM PST by Kaslin
If it gets on the Ballot, I’ll Vote for it.
My comment is based on what I see, nobody cares. It’s the same old, same old and as long as the Rats have a Super Majority here they will figure out another way IF the Ballot Proposition passes.
Ten to one a Liberal CA Judge will invalidate the Proposition if it ever sees the light of day anyway.
It won’t be on the ballot if people don’t sign the petitions.
Tax shift (SHAFT) ping!
In the interest of FRee discourse and full disclosure, as one of that unfortunate minority in the People's Republic of Pennsyltucky I'm looking at a 30 - 50% tax INCREASE.
And that will change my vote from GOP to Libertarian forever.
Yes, it seems very unconservative to ram through radical changes in the tax law. I guess that they don't believe in letting people adjust to any of the changes by phasing them in. The only way to be safe is to save every penny that can since you never know when they're going to change all the rules in Washington. That's especially the case judging by the following graph of the federal debt:
You can find the numbers at this link. As you can see, at 106 percent of GDP, the gross debt is much higher than it was during Reagan's 1986 tax reform (46.7% of GDP) or even Bush's 2001 tax cut (54.6% of GDP). Now we're tacking on another $1 trillion of debt according to the latest JCT report, even under dynamic scoring. All just in time for the Boomer retirement, nine years into an expansion when we have historically had recessions every 10 years or so. But maybe this time it's different.
There's also an up-to-date calculator at https://econdata.shinyapps.io/taxcuts/ that can give your tax cut and change in your after-tax income for the House and Senate bills. It gives the same results as examples put out by the House, the Senate, and the Tax Foundation.
What might happen?
1.High tax states reduce their taxes. Ha, ha, ha, ha...
2. People leave high tax states for low tax states. Real estate prices in high tax states drop; in low tax states, real estate goes up.
3. Companies can no longer get talent in high tax states because housing prices are still way too high and residents can not deduct SALT. Companies relocate to low tax states. This reinforces housing price adjustments.
4. High tax states are eventually forced to reduce taxes and taxes get some control on their spending. This will be difficult with huge public employee pension costs.
Re-establishing equilibrium will take years.
This relieves the other states from subsidizing the high tax states.
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