I don't follow you. But I'd say that if we combine corporate income tax (of the bigger ones) with the dividend tax, we get something which ends up rather flat....high, but flat.If I include corporate taxes, it further proves my point, because it's not progressive.
I don't argue with that. It's a thoughtful approach.If we go with a corporation (might as well use Johnson and Johnson again), their effective worldwide corporate tax rate for 2010 was 21.3% (not sure how much of that is federal, state, and international). They pay approximately 50% of their earnings out as dividends, so getting taxed an additional 15% federal tax on that portion, means that half of my income through this company is getting taxed at 21.3%, and the other half is getting taxed at 36.3% (plus other tax), for a net result of 28.8% (plus other tax). So if me and a multimillionaire both own JNJ stock, I'm paying a higher tax rate than my wage income, and she would be paying a lower tax rate than on her tax bracket for income from wages. This is what needs to be resolved- corporate taxes need to be reduced, and individual taxation needs to be truly progressive rather than having the illusion of progression.
I've no argument against making depreciation match the actual life of the asset....in fact I favor it.And if I refer to my partnership income, then both me and the millionaire are getting exceptionally low tax rates far below our tax brackets (because of the aforementioned issue of the net income being recorded so far below true cash flow). So if a wealthy person that derives most of their income from assets like partnerships, compared to me who derives most of my income from wages as an engineer and a smaller percentage from assets, her tax rate will be lower than mine.
It is eventually recaptured upon sale, but it's still often either a tax dodge or an unfair tax burden.
Oh dear, this misses my main thesis entirely. Regarding capital gains tax being indexed for accumulated inflation, it doesn't matter whether the factory owner had a profit or a loss during ownership. Net income/loss would be addressed by the income tax of each fiscal year. Capital gains tax should be about economic appreciation (realThe point is that a tax code shouldn't be based around the worst case scenario of a terrible investor- someone who buys a factory, lets it sit for 10 years without operating, and then sells it.
gain in value), rather than dollar appreciation (which includes phantom gain due to currency devaluation).
So, if you sold a stock at a profit, you'd calculate what portion of your gain is economic gain....& pay tax on that alone.Stocks have historically gone up at a significantly higher rate of return than inflation.
Not always true with investments. The highest & best use of an asset could be farther down the road, eg, G Selden's patent of the automobile, land held for development with less profitable intermediate uses (eg, self storage).Assets that depreciate but are purchased for a purpose of acquiring cash flow, like a factory, are valuable for their cash flow potential rather than their capital gains.
Meh...it could be worked around. But I don't buy the premise that corporate income needs to be taxed at all. Some countries will win, some will lose, but overall it could work fairly.Seems like a good idea on the surface, but there are problems with that.
-The first problem is that of abuse. This is an increasingly flat world- if a business is located in country X, investors in that business could be located in countries A, B, C, D, E, F....X, Y, Z, and so forth. Taking taxes out of the corporation is easier than dealing with all of that.
-The second, and larger problem, is that of complexity. A large business has operations all over the world, and in all different jurisdictions. They have income from so many states and so many countries, that their tax situation is ridiculously complicated. So, teams of accountants deal with taxation on the corporate level. Pass through entities like an MLP or other publicly traded partnership provide tons of tax advantages, but they also increase complexity because all national and state taxes are on the burden of the unit holder. If each individual share holder had to individually deal with all the taxes of Johnson and Johnson, investing would be impossible.
I still don't buy that it was progressive (by your measure) before Bush.So that's why I think there still needs to be taxation at the corporate level and at the individual level, but it should revert to a pre-Bush era where it's progressive taxation.
Simplicity is a nice goal, but it isn't the only one.I see a bit of contradiction here- because on one hand you're saying that depreciation needs overhauling and that there shouldn't be a cookie cutter approach, but on the other hand you're saying that there are too many nuances.
As with all things, some things need simplification & others need a more complex solution.
Tis all about optimization. But when in doubt, a good default is to keep it simple.I agree that the tax code needs streamlining, but any tax code is going to have nuances in this complicated world.
And we end up with government pushing corn based ethanol, financing Stirling cycle car engines, etc. I favor much more broadly based incentives....want clean energy, tax for the damage done by dirty energy, ie, a fuel tax. That steers the market by a general incentive, rather than corrupt fools in DC picking a specific solution like hybrid car & ethanol subsidy.I think naturally some favorites should be played. Business initiatives alone do not take into account long-term planning or environmental protection. Giving incentives towards cleaner energy is important.
Investors who provide capital also boost economic output & hiring. I don't recognize as big a difference as you do.Plus, there's a difference between a multi-millionaire getting millions in passive partnership income, and a small business owner trying to hire employees and increase economic output. I'm for giving tax breaks for smaller businesses.
Double taxation seems inevitable anyway, given the demonization of corporations in the media & politics.I think that corporate tax needs to be reduced, but that some double taxation is both inevitable and ok, as long as the final effective tax rate is both reasonable and progressive.
It ain't like anyone will take me seriously.
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