dxmnkd316
Lucia Apologist
Re: Frayed Ends: Business, Economics, and Tax Policy 3.0
Sigh all you want, you clearly aren't understanding the math.
Sigh
Sigh all you want, you clearly aren't understanding the math.
Sigh
In Scooby math, regressive tax rates minus payroll tax and eliminating most (all?) deductions = flat tax.Sigh all you want, you clearly aren't understanding the math.
Except that a flat tax would only exacerbate this
See, I think we have stumbled on a pretty decent system. We're so close to having a great system. Sure it's complicated. But it's fixable without the need for an overhaul.
Just change capital gains to regular income and uncap the payroll tax.
Deductions like mortgage interest are actually a good thing. Housing might be one of the biggest drivers of the economy. Making it more affordable to own a house is a good thing. It builds wealth and helps the overall economy.
See, I think we have stumbled on a pretty decent system. We're so close to having a great system. Sure it's complicated. But it's fixable without the need for an overhaul.
Just change capital gains to regular income and uncap the payroll tax.
Deductions like mortgage interest are actually a good thing. Housing might be one of the biggest drivers of the economy. Making it more affordable to own a house is a good thing. It builds wealth and helps the overall economy.
See, I think we have stumbled on a pretty decent system. We're so close to having a great system. Sure it's complicated. But it's fixable without the need for an overhaul.
Just change capital gains to regular income and uncap the payroll tax.
Deductions like mortgage interest are actually a good thing. Housing might be one of the biggest drivers of the economy. Making it more affordable to own a house is a good thing. It builds wealth and helps the overall economy.
See, I think we have stumbled on a pretty decent system. We're so close to having a great system. Sure it's complicated. But it's fixable without the need for an overhaul.
Just change capital gains to regular income and uncap the payroll tax.
Deductions like mortgage interest are actually a good thing. Housing might be one of the biggest drivers of the economy. Making it more affordable to own a house is a good thing. It builds wealth and helps the overall economy.
Except that a flat tax would only exacerbate this. The other problem is that as you shift the revenue burden up the scale AND be revenue neutral, you are needing to go to marginal numbers that start to become non-starters for a lot of people, even moderates. Say you want to completely exempt everything under 25k, you'd probably need to have something that looks like:
$0 0.0%
$25,000 0.0%
$37,450 17.5%
$90,750 28.0%
$189,300 35.0%
$411,500 41.5%
$666,667 45.0%
$1,000,000 50.0%
$5,000,000 60.0%
All Over 5M 65.0%
That would (roughly) lower the effective rate for everyone under $100k and increase it for everyone over. It's pretty incredible how much is generated by that first $25,000.
If you do the $75k/33% rule, you'd have a massive, massive revenue shortfall. You'd need to go with something like a $75k/62% rule.
Furthermore, it is becoming apparent that scooby doesn't understand what a flat tax is and how it compares to what we have. Because he's proposed is just a lower effective rate version of what we have, (and what we have is a progressive system).
See, I think we have stumbled on a pretty decent system. We're so close to having a great system. Sure it's complicated. But it's fixable without the need for an overhaul.
Just change capital gains to regular income and uncap the payroll tax.
Deductions like mortgage interest are actually a good thing. Housing might be one of the biggest drivers of the economy. Making it more affordable to own a house is a good thing. It builds wealth and helps the overall economy.
The only thing the housing deduction did was to make it more expensive to purchase a house from a pricetag perspective. Realtors and mortgage companies lobbied for it because they had obvious monetary interests. Once the interest deductions were allowed, prices for housing jumped a couple percentage points, as did mortgage rates at the time. People purchasing their first homes at the time saw no significant difference in their overall housing expenditures, and the same goes for all subsequent first-timers. The only people who benefitted from the deduction were those who had existing mortgages at the time the deduction was enacted.
Sure, it's a great system when I pay a higher percentage than Mitt Romney does. You can rip my ideas all you want but at least with my ideas I pay less than Mitt does. Oh, and home ownership isn't a wealth driver. I own one. I know.
This makes no sense and I'm curious if you are actually a homeowner or not. Home prices are a function of supply and demand, not federal tax policy. So, if the feds eliminated the mortgage deduction tomorrow, people would still be clammoring to live in the same places they always gravitate to in the great search for jobs. Eliminate the mortage deduction and all you do is raise taxes on the middle class, while the uber wealthy experience no change in their financial status. As I said to joe, I'll say to you. Its not 1982 anymore. Not every tax benefit needs to go to the 1%.
*I* pay a higher % than Mitt. (and probably the Clintons and George Soros). But as a bottom line, they pay a heck of a lot more than we do.
*I* pay a higher % than Mitt. (and probably the Clintons and George Soros). But as a bottom line, they pay a heck of a lot more than we do.
This makes no sense and I'm curious if you are actually a homeowner or not. Home prices are a function of supply and demand, not federal tax policy. So, if the feds eliminated the mortgage deduction tomorrow, people would still be clammoring to live in the same places they always gravitate to in the great search for jobs. Eliminate the mortage deduction and all you do is raise taxes on the middle class, while the uber wealthy experience no change in their financial status. As I said to joe, I'll say to you. Its not 1982 anymore. Not every tax benefit needs to go to the 1%.
The mortgage interest deduction artificially increases demand, but I don't know that it's significant considering the size of the overall housing market and the requirements for getting a mortgage to begin with. Most likely, it merely allows people to buy a slightly bigger home than they would have before, it probably doesn't lock people out altogether. It's not like New York or San Francisco would suddenly fall to Midwest housing prices if the deduction were eliminated.
So? They make a really helluva lot more than you. That's not a reason they should pay a lower percentage.
Yes, I am a homeowner, and I get the deduction just like many people around here. Like unofan said, the change in value does not keeping people out of the market entirely, it might change the size of the home or a couple options you put within the home.
It's really basic stuff. I have a monthly housing budget of $1,000/month, have saved $40,000. What can I afford for a home and a mortgage? Along comes the mortgage interest tax deduction, which might come out to $4,000-5,000 annually, that's going to change how much money I can now allot to my new home. Will it change by the full avg value of the mortgage interest deduction? Perhaps for some, likely not for others. Regardless, mortgage companies and real estate brokerage firms all figured out how to capture as much of that deduction as possible when it went into place. No, it's not going the only driving force to home prices, I never said it was, only that it moves the price a little higher as we all now have a slightly larger budget.
Basically, what looks like a good deal for consumers/electorate may not actually be the deal they think they're getting. But it sure does feel good and candidates had something fun to use on the campaign trail after it passed.
You've backtracked about as quickly as the Republicans over the Confederate Flag issue, but that's cool. Regardless your premise still makes little sense for most people. What you can afford to pay for a house is a function of your monthly income. Hence a lot of people with uneven incomes have trouble getting mortgages even if overall they make enough money in total for the year. Why? Because you can't skip a payment in months where you don't get paid a lot. So, the notion that you will receive some tax benefit the following April has little to no bearing on how much you can afford each month in the current year. What the credit does do is give people an incentive to buy instead of rent holding other costs even but the main driver on that is 99% supply and demand & jobs.