Posted on 12/30/2002 2:51:31 AM PST by Cincinatus' Wife
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:08:53 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
THE BUSH administration is thinking of reducing or eliminating the tax on dividends, a reasonable idea were it not part of a drive to shift federal taxation away from wealthy Americans. Proponents of the idea are right that the the economy needs a boost, but that is no reason to cut taxes in ways that slight the needs of average Americans.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
Not that there was any noticable difference between the two, editorial-wise, anyway.
That's why they're touting .....If Bush wants to help his reelection prospects and give a solid boost to the economy, he ought to heed the Business Roundtable's proposal for a one-year cut in the Social Security payroll tax, which is a disproportionate burden on low-income people. At a cost of $140 billion, the Roundtable's plan would provide $620 to almost every wage earner. This cut should be accompanied by a $140 billion contribution from the Treasury into the Social Security trust fund to protect its solvency. The payroll tax cut could be paired with elimination of the dividend tax, also recommended by the Roundtable.
Yes they do, but it is located in their retirement accounts, college funds, or other mutual fund.
Seriously, this may be just the tool to straighten out values in the stock market. This would be a great use of tax policy to fix a very real problem with overvaluation of losers. Imagine - having the highest priced stocks being the ones which pay the most dividends, as opposed to losers which never pay out anything.
Companies would actually try to pay out more as opposed to hanging onto money in bloated budgets.
The best case for eliminating the levy on dividends is that company profits should not be taxed twice, as they are now . . .
This editorial completely misses the point. The best case for eliminating the tax on dividends is that doing so will encourage companies to actually pay these dvidends instead of paying zero dividends and reporting nebulous "earnings" (whatever the heck "earnings" are).
Seems you are letting youself get bit by the class warfare bug. Either that or you do not fully understand or recognize the dynamic scoring presented by the most recent Cap Gains windfalls as measured by increased tax receipts to the gov't following the cuts of 1983 and 1997.
Actually, in the context of Capital Gains you are correct (that is what we were talking about, as I recall), but it is doubtful that we could get such a thing in this current climate.
But seriously, if you read my previous posts, my point was that the democrats WILL use the issue as a class warfare thing...and my guess is it will stick this time.
It didn't stick in the previous lowerings of cap gains tax rates, in spite of a flurry of media-led leftist demogoguery. The climate has shifted in the tax debate toward the increasing pool of stock holders which now exist among the common people, not just the elites. All that class warfare stuff just doesn't play like it used to in the '30's.
... but I'd rather forgoe the extra dough in my pocket right now so that lasting changes can be made that in the long run are more important for the country.
You need to think more agressively, and pro-actively. We finally won decisively in November and you are still too comfortable just playing defense. The year 2002 was the political solidification year, affirming the victory of 2000. The year 2004 will be icing on the cake like Reagan's '84 win-amid-booming prosperity, but this time we don't have to try to get a Republican tax cut plan through a Democrat controlled Ways and Means Committee just waiting to stall it and mangle it.
Actually, if I were Bush, I would propose a scrapping of every income tax bill implemented since 1990 and re-institute the Gramm Rudman Act rates (15%/28%)eventually bringing it to one lower ~15% flat rate, and zero the Cap Gains/Inheritance/marriage penalty taxes. Alternatively, kill the entire IRC, repeal 16th Amendment, and implement the Nat'l Retail Sales Tax. Throw a bunch of lawyers and tax accountants out of work and who will really mourn?
Do this and GWB won't just be re-elected, together with Repub super majorities. He'll likely be crowned King, and the Repubs will be in the drivers' seat for the next 50 years.
You are so wrong about that. The inheritance tax is most cruel to family farmers or other family businesses like small shops and restaurants. It could be that the value of the land or business is over a million, but the heirs have no way of raising that amount to pay taxes.
Small business has always been the life-blood of our economy (about 85% work for small businesses) and this tax is draining that.
Nothing is wrong with that, of course. But most of the people who are hit hard by this tax do not have multi-millions.
This tax affects far more middle class people than the Libs will ever admit.
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