PDA

View Full Version : How Much In Taxes Should You Pay?



red states rule
08-09-2007, 05:33 AM
How much in taxes should you pay to the Federal government? Why should you pay more if you earn more?

What is the proper tax rate?

The tax-rate dilemma
Richard W. Rahn
August 9, 2007

Economic advisers to presidential candidates face a dilemma when it comes to tax reform. In order to maximize revenue, there must be low tax rates on the poor and the rich, because the poor lack the money, and the rich can always find ways around high rates. At the same time, the middle class will understandably not stand for being taxed more than the rich.

Warren Buffett, the country's second-richest man, recently wrote an article saying his average income tax rate was only 17.7 percent, while his secretary paid a rate of 30 percent. In the 2004 election, it was revealed that John Kerry (the richest man ever to run for president) and his wife only paid an average income tax rate of 12 percent, far less than most middle-class Americans.

Many politicians of the left and their lackeys in the "drive-by-media" engage in the rant that the rich should pay more. Yet, when you look at their proposals "for increasing taxes on rich," you most always find their plans involve increasing taxes on those who are trying to become rich, while barely touching the already rich, like the Kerrys and Kennedys. To test the sincerity of any politician's proposal to increase "taxes on the rich," I use the Kerry test, whereby I go back and look at the Kerrys' tax returns to see if it will have meaningful impact on them. (Note: The top 1 percent of income earners pays 37 percent of all income taxes.)

The political case for pro-growth tax policy, as opposed to redistributionist tax policy, is simple. Surveys over the last few decades have consistently shown most Americans believe no one should have to pay more than 25 percent of income to the government.

The reasons for this finding are that most Americans believe it is not fair for the government to take more than one-quarter of anyone's income, and many Americans who are not rich think they may become rich — by building a business, being a sports or entertainment success, or even by winning the lottery. Most Americans (unlike many Europeans) do not resent rich people; they admire them and want to be one of them. Hence, pro-growth candidates tend to do better at the polls than pro-redistribution candidates.

If you are advising a Republican candidate, you should note that most Republican primary voters do not care about taxing the rich more; they care about reducing the taxes they pay and reining in the Internal Revenue Service tyranny. In the general election, a few may vote for a candidate just because he or she promises to make the rich pay more, but almost certainly such voters will vote for the Democrat anyway. The Republican is unlikely to pick up any votes by playing the class-warfare game and would most certainly undermine his or her base.

The economic case for not raising tax rates on the rich is even more compelling. High tax rates can destroy wealth creation, and they won't make the rich pay more. One advantage of being very rich is that you tend to have a choice about the form in which you receive your income, where you earn it, and where you are taxed. Many rich Swedes and Frenchmen have become tax exiles from their own countries. When a rich person leaves, his government gets nothing. When tax rates are perceived to be too high, people tend to choose leisure over work, and consumption over saving and investment, resulting in less revenue for government.

Economists have been trying to figure out the optimum tax rate for each income group. If you believe the rich should pay a higher portion of their income than the poor, you confront a problem. As tax rates increase, the incentive to find legal or illegal ways to avoid them grows exponentially; yet the richer one is, the easier it becomes to avoid paying the tax. Hence, if the goal is to maximize tax revenue over the long run, the government would have low rates on low income people, higher rates on the middle class, and then lower rates on the very rich.

http://washingtontimes.com/article/20070809/COMMENTARY/108090008/1012

PostmodernProphet
08-09-2007, 06:38 AM
they care about reducing the taxes they pay and reining in the Internal Revenue Service tyranny.

BINGO!

red states rule
08-09-2007, 06:42 AM
BINGO!

High tax rates can destroy wealth creation, and they won't make the rich pay more.

Bigger Bingo

red states rule
08-09-2007, 06:55 AM
This is totally ridiculous



Mets fan could face big tax bill over Bonds' home run ball

By MARCUS WOHLSEN, Associated Press Writer
August 8, 2007

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Before he celebrates his windfall, the New York Mets fan who emerged from a violent scrum clutching Barry Bonds' record-setting home run ball should probably call his accountant.

As soon as 21-year-old Matt Murphy snagged the valuable piece of sports history Tuesday night, his souvenir became taxable income in the eyes of the Internal Revenue Service, according to experts.

"It's an expensive catch," said John Barrie, a tax lawyer with Bryan Cave LLP in New York who grew up watching the Giants play at Candlestick Park. "Once he took possession of the ball and it was his ball, it was income to him based on its value as of yesterday,"

By most estimates, the ball that put Bonds atop the list of all-time home run hitters with 756 would sell in the half-million dollar range on the open market or at auction.

That would instantly put Murphy, a college student from Queens, in the highest tax bracket for individual income, where he would face a tax rate of about 35 percent, or about $210,000 on a $600,000 ball.

Even if he does not sell the ball, Murphy would still owe the taxes based on a reasonable estimate of its value, according to Barrie. Capital gains taxes also could be levied in the future as the ball gains value, he said.

On the other hand, he said, if the ongoing federal investigation into steroid abuse among professional athletes takes a criminal turn for Bonds, the ball's value could go down -- which would likely allow Murphy to claim a loss.

Not everyone concurs on Barrie's interpretation of the intersection between professional sports and the nation's tax code.

But for its part, the IRS seems reluctant to clear up the confusion. With six-figure treasures so rarely falling out of the sky, the agency declined to comment Wednesday on what regulations would apply and whether they would be enforced in the case of the Bonds ball.

History does not provide much of a guide since most fans who have been lucky enough to snag previous long balls have chosen to sell their mementos. And at least one ball was as much a source of embarrassment for the IRS as revenue.

As Mark McGwire chased the mark for most home runs in a season in 1998, IRS officials initially said the ball that broke Roger Maris' long-standing record could be subject to taxes even if it were returned to McGwire. The statements were ridiculed by politicians and quickly disavowed by the agency's top brass.

"All I know is that the fan who gives back the home run ball deserves a round of applause, not a big tax bill," then-IRS Commissioner Charles Rossotti said at the time.

Ultimately, Tim Forneris, a member of the St. Louis Cardinals grounds crew, recovered McGwire's 62nd home run ball. He turned it over to the Cardinals and received a trip to Disney World and a minivan in return.

Phil Ozersky, a Cardinals season-ticket holder, caught McGwire's 70th homer later that season and sold it in 1999 to comic book artist Todd McFarlane for $3 million.

A spokeswoman for the Giants said that as with any ball that enters the stands at AT&T Park, Bonds' 435-foot drive into the right-center field stands belonged to the person who caught it, so the team wouldn't seek its return. Bonds said he also had no interest in retrieving it.

Murphy, who went to the game during a layover from a flight to Australia, grew up near Shea Stadium and was wearing a Mets jersey when he made the charmed grab.

He told the New York Daily News he planned to keep 51 percent of the proceeds from the sale of the ball and would give the rest to his friend, Amir Kamal, 21, of New York, who was also at the game.

"I won the lottery," he told the newspaper. "I'm going to be smart about what I do with it."

http://sports.yahoo.com/mlb/news?slug=ap-bonds-ball&prov=ap&type=lgns