Re: Strands in the Tapestry: the Business, Economics, and Tax Policy Thread
Very very bad policy. There is a much simpler, and far better, idea afloat:
1. get rid of the 10% early withdrawal penalty. That only benefits financial institutions, not the ordinary person.
2. replace the income tax entirely with a far simpler system that provides incentives to save and invest.
> list all money that comes into the household, from any source.
> from it deduct depreciation (if applicable), all asset purchases, all deposits to savings and investment accounts, all insurance premiums, gifts, and charitable donations.
> pay tax on what's left.
Some people call that a "consumption" tax, which is a really noxious name. Right now we have a "consumption and savings" tax instead, as if that somehow is better?
If there's one thing I don't like, it's 401k / Traditional IRA rules. Not only is the government taking a big roll of the dice on people living until retirement age, but it's also very dangerous for the retiree when it comes to taxes. I would, quite frankly, get rid of the deferral rules, while grandfathering what is already paid in but no more, unless the retiree should decide to pay off a conversion fee to Roth. If you want a retirement account, do it Roth style. The government gets their money right away, and the retiree makes their money through wise investments in earnings. After all, compounding earnings and dividends is how you really make money.
Very very bad policy. There is a much simpler, and far better, idea afloat:
1. get rid of the 10% early withdrawal penalty. That only benefits financial institutions, not the ordinary person.
2. replace the income tax entirely with a far simpler system that provides incentives to save and invest.
> list all money that comes into the household, from any source.
> from it deduct depreciation (if applicable), all asset purchases, all deposits to savings and investment accounts, all insurance premiums, gifts, and charitable donations.
> pay tax on what's left.
Some people call that a "consumption" tax, which is a really noxious name. Right now we have a "consumption and savings" tax instead, as if that somehow is better?