4/18/2011 8:51:02 PM
Related: why is there a gift tax? If I give you a million bucks, just for the sake of it, why should the government get a cut of that? Yet another reason to eliminate our invasive tax laws and institute a consumption tax.
4/18/2011 8:52:24 PM
gift taxes are straight retarded.
4/18/2011 8:53:57 PM
the whole article:
4/18/2011 8:54:32 PM
thats what he gets for being a fucking astros fandoesnt dubya own part of the astros? clearly his fault
4/18/2011 8:55:24 PM
something has to pay for all this govt sponsored healthcare
4/18/2011 8:55:56 PM
I understand corporations and individuals use(D) gifts as a tax evasion maneuver but seriously, there's gotta be a better way to sort between corruption from legitimate without punishing everyone just because the government lacks the power of common sense.
4/18/2011 8:56:12 PM
4/18/2011 9:01:16 PM
It's not punishing people. Gifts come in all sizes, large and small, and the giver is not taxed. Thus, the receiver must be. If they didn't have this type of tax, then people could easily get around tax laws by simply "giving" items to someone, and later on, in an unrelated transaction, have that person "give" them money.The receiver of the conferred benefit must pay taxes on the value of that benefit received. The only issue here is that it seems like such a small item that this guy has been gifted, so it shouldn't be taxed, and that is why there is a $600 threshold. If I give you a teddy bear, it's not taxed. If I give you ten thousand teddy bears, they are. The same applies here. Just because this guy only wanted to use 8 of the coupons doesn't mean the value is not there.I know a guy who won a violin in a game show one time. He didn't play the fucking violin, so he had to sell it just to pay the tax bill. Point is, the government can't go around figuring out what has value to YOU, it's about the objective market valuation.
4/18/2011 9:06:53 PM
so let's say i work and save up $100k and pay my income taxes on itthen i give my buddy $100k as a giftwhy should he have to pay taxes on that?
4/18/2011 9:21:22 PM
http://turbotax.intuit.com/tax-tools/tax-tips/Tax-Planning-and-Checklists/The-Gift-Tax/INF12036.html[Edited on April 18, 2011 at 9:31 PM. Reason : G]
4/18/2011 9:28:27 PM
Consumption tax, baby. Otherwise, me and you can trade the same stack of bills back and forth all day, and at the end of the day, 99% of it belongs to the government, according to the law. Does that sound right?
4/18/2011 9:30:40 PM
I don't know about you all, but I pay taxes on birthday and Christmas gifts every year.
4/18/2011 9:32:02 PM
you must be giving amazing giftscan i get on your list
4/18/2011 9:32:53 PM
I'm talking about the gifts I receive. But sure, I'll hook you up.
4/18/2011 9:33:43 PM
hey not to get faggy in chit chat but,a CPA friend said consumption taxes fuck the poor. in what way? (he didnt explain the statement)
4/18/2011 9:38:42 PM
Because there's no real way to "not tax" someone below the poverty level. They already pay almost nothing, then theyll have to pay 20% more. I'm not against a consumption tax, but there's flaws that aren't cleanly worked out
4/18/2011 9:45:46 PM
There appears to be a huge amount of misunderstanding about gifts vs winnings up in this thread.
4/18/2011 9:56:58 PM
4/18/2011 10:09:22 PM
sounds like the obvious thing would have been to limit the coupon winnings to a $600 value to keep below the threshold
4/18/2011 10:16:06 PM
consumption tax ftmfwthose below poverty line should get a refund based on income and consumption tax rate. say they ear $20k/year and consumption tax is 10%, then they get a 2k check. what's wrong with that.
4/18/2011 10:26:43 PM
flat tax, sureconsumption tax (as much as I love the idea from a savings perspective)--fuck no, from the perspective of what it means for the poor.
4/18/2011 10:31:44 PM
^^they will starve to death before they get the check.
4/18/2011 10:35:40 PM
^who said they have to wait so long? monthly? bi-monthly? etc? there are options. and no, they wouldn't starve to death anyways.
4/18/2011 10:36:42 PM
^ I'm not totally sold on the FairTax, but it addresses that concern by making it a "prebate".^^ All things being equal (i.e., revenue-neutral), I don't see how a consumption tax would be any worse for the poor than a flat tax, although either can be engineered pretty easily to not tax the poor.
4/18/2011 10:40:21 PM
Ok, assuming you take care of the poor, How can they be engineered to not shift the incredible bulk of the tax burden on to the middle class?
4/18/2011 10:47:26 PM
You can't. People forget that most of the rich's assets are in non physical objects, removing capital gains taxes removes more revenue...[Edited on April 18, 2011 at 10:51 PM. Reason : .]
4/18/2011 10:51:06 PM
because it's consumption based? rich people spend more money, that's a given, thus they'll pay the most in taxes. and there obviously have to be limits on the maximum rate. I say 10%. I'd have the states set their individual rate (<=10%) and the feds bill the state for their share. that's right, 10%. shrink the government baby!
4/18/2011 10:52:39 PM
but poor people will pay a higher percentage of their income in taxes
4/18/2011 10:54:19 PM
There is not really a way that could generate nearly enough revenue to operate the government. It would have to be like 25%. At that point you discourage consumption and kill the economy. You can't put in something that tells people "hey, don't go out and buy stuff"This entire idea was generated by the uber rich as way out of paying the bulk of the taxes.
4/18/2011 10:56:04 PM
4/18/2011 10:57:05 PM
ITS THAT EASY!!!
4/18/2011 10:57:38 PM
what does the fed bring in each year? ~$2 trillion? how much do american's spend each year? ~$14 trillion? 10% of that...1.4 trillion?
4/18/2011 11:08:08 PM
4/18/2011 11:09:54 PM
4/18/2011 11:15:53 PM
that's essentially what I said earlier dammit
4/18/2011 11:16:33 PM
them 190% jalapeno kolaches
4/18/2011 11:16:46 PM
1000 DOLLAR PENCILS5000 DOLLAR TOILET SEATS
4/18/2011 11:18:23 PM
On the point that a consumption tax hurts the poor, that's why I specifically mentioned a value added tax, or something like that. On lower cost per unit items (groceries, fuel, you know - things that the poor spend most of their money on), you get, say, a 5% tax. On high cost per unit items, (homes, vehicles), you get perhaps a 10% sales tax, and on things that really only the super rich can afford, some higher tax. The actual percentage amounts there are hypothetical, but you should be able to see how a consumption tax can be modified in such a way that it isn't regressive in its outcome.In any case, this system would have many benefits. For one, it's not invasive - the current income/gift/estate/reward/etc taxes basically require the honor system on a massive scale (clearly this model was not designed for humans?), it's an invasion of privacy, it requires a gigantic arsenal of tax-related government workers to enforce which is a drain on the budget in itself, and there is a huge portion of the private sector devoted to working with/around taxes that could otherwise be participating in productive endeavors.[Edited on April 18, 2011 at 11:43 PM. Reason : ]
4/18/2011 11:37:51 PM
DOLLAR BUCKS
4/18/2011 11:41:58 PM
i think that's a dangerous way to engineer the tax not to be regressive. Jumping through all sorts of overly complicated, easily manipulated hoops to make a consumption tax progressive kind of defeats the purpose. At most, I'd say to exempt certain staples (easy to do with a sales tax...not so easy with a VAT, though). The more reasonable approach, I think--particularly with a VAT--is to just go with a credit equivalent to the value of necessary staples.
4/18/2011 11:43:27 PM
Do you trust your wife? What I mean is, do you think she'd go behind your back? Try to hamstring you? If you want to keep that money, all of it, just give it to your wife. See, the IRS allows you a one-time-only gift to your spouse. It's good up to sixty thousand dollars. Tax free. IRS can't touch one cent. It's perfectly legal. Go ask the IRS, they'll say the same thing. Actually, I feel silly telling you all this. I'm sure you would have investigated the matter yourself.
4/18/2011 11:48:38 PM
I still think what I described would be better than what we've got now, and probably an easily sell to progressives. I like the idea of exempting certain kinds of items and sticking with a flat tax - picking the credit "threshold" sounds a little iffy, and I'm not sure exactly how it'd be enforced.
4/18/2011 11:49:26 PM
4/19/2011 12:19:17 AM
If you start with a paycheck, 37% is taken out immediately for taxes.Then when you buy food at a restaurant, or see a movie, or whatever, there is tax on the same money.The tax burden is way higher than 25% per buck.
4/19/2011 12:22:58 AM
Along with giving everyone a stipend, include socialized medicine, food, higher education and transportation. Everything else must be bought and taxed. Basically everyone gets what they need free and buys extra shit at really high tax rates. O wait, this is starting to look like a planned economy.
4/19/2011 1:27:48 AM
^ I never said anything like that...^^ Probably if you count SS and Medicare taxes...that's kind of a separate argument, unfortunately. Actual income tax witholding, on average, is nowhere near 37%.
4/19/2011 5:26:30 PM
Yeah, the government likes to get their cut out of each. and. every. time. money. changes. hands.If the govt. was even approaching fiscal responsibility they'd have more than enough to do what they need to do with all that money they skim off every transaction.
4/19/2011 6:01:17 PM
UNFAIR EGGS
4/19/2011 6:03:04 PM
UNFAIR TAXEGGTION
4/19/2011 6:03:27 PM