Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7007|132 and Bush

FloppY_ wrote:

I dunno about you guys, but the danish TAX is dynamic, as in.. 41% is only the MINIMUM tax, if you earn a "decent" amount you pay 61%
Most of the US also has a state income tax, sales tax, and property taxes. They aren't going to show up on colorful graphs. Those are local revenue streams, and the Fed does not see any of it.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
FloppY_
­
+1,010|6692|Denmark aka Automotive Hell

Kmarion wrote:

FloppY_ wrote:

I dunno about you guys, but the danish TAX is dynamic, as in.. 41% is only the MINIMUM tax, if you earn a "decent" amount you pay 61%
Most of the US also has a state income tax, sales tax, and property taxes. They aren't going to show up on colorful graphs. Those are local revenue streams, and the Fed does not see any of it.
How much VAT do you add to goods in the US ?  Here it is 25% of a products base value
­ Your thoughts, insights, and musings on this matter intrigue me
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7007|132 and Bush

FloppY_ wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

FloppY_ wrote:

I dunno about you guys, but the danish TAX is dynamic, as in.. 41% is only the MINIMUM tax, if you earn a "decent" amount you pay 61%
Most of the US also has a state income tax, sales tax, and property taxes. They aren't going to show up on colorful graphs. Those are local revenue streams, and the Fed does not see any of it.
How much VAT do you add to goods in the US ?  Here it is 25% of a products base value
We have a sales tax and it varies by state and county. It is based on the retail price.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
FloppY_
­
+1,010|6692|Denmark aka Automotive Hell

Kmarion wrote:

FloppY_ wrote:

Kmarion wrote:


Most of the US also has a state income tax, sales tax, and property taxes. They aren't going to show up on colorful graphs. Those are local revenue streams, and the Fed does not see any of it.
How much VAT do you add to goods in the US ?  Here it is 25% of a products base value
We have a sales tax and it varies by state and county. It is based on the retail price.
The worst thing in denmark when it comes to "VAT" and the likes, is the tax on cars... we pay for 180% the price of the cars... which means, in the UK you can get something like a Golf GTI top spec model for somewhere around £30000, where it will in denmark cost you £50000 with little or no extra equipment..
­ Your thoughts, insights, and musings on this matter intrigue me
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,991|7038|949

Kmarion wrote:

Because we are trying to force business out. 43% of Americas poorest also pay zero or negative income tax.
You mean 43% of taxable Americans.  Or maybe I am reading that graph wrong?  I didn't see where it broke down the income levels of those 150 million 'tax units' that claimed negative or zero.  The reality is, and this will probably be painful for a few people to hear, but the small business owner is on average a bigger tax cheat than any other person in the US.  This was discussed in Freakanomics, there's been numerous studies that back it up too.  I'd reckon the data in your link probably reflects that sad reality, not the tax rates of the lowest 43% of taxable people. 

My former boss (a small business owner) made over $135k a year for about 5 years and managed to claim negative income every year.  Not exactly the poor fucking the system here - in fact its the very sector of our economy constantly championed as the backbone of the US.

Kmarion wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

When almost half of the country isn't paying for anything you've got a problem. That would be about 150 million people.
I pay my taxes.  The last time I filed, I broke even.  So, contrary to your stats, I don't get money back from the government.
OIC, Turquoise pays his taxes and "break evens", so the tax policy center (which gets it's data from the IRS) must be wrong.
I wonder if Turq would be considered a part of that 43%?
ATG
Banned
+5,233|6935|Global Command
I can speak for experience Ken that you can only claim a loss for a certain number of years, 3 or 5, and then the IRS will insist that you shut down. It's one of those things you learn about business; loopholes. When you start a new business you are expected to outlay most of the profit on establishment and expansion.


The problem is, like so much of our society, it became " how much can you game the system. "

Instead of learning that if you want financing such as SBA or venture capital you HAVE to run a profit, people revert to the natural current tendency, which is the scam. If you are just another non-ambitious smuck you ride the loss allowance years for all its worth. If you know what you are doing and have a good product and business model, you show maximum growth potential and profit, so you can attract investors.

Which leads us back to taxes; knowing there are so many ways to game the system, I support a flat tax on corporate gross receipts, and a 5-8% flat tax on all other transactions.


That makes too much sense, so nevermind. btw, did your parents have a hippy name for you, like moonbeam, or Lightning?

That's what I imagine.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7007|132 and Bush

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

Because we are trying to force business out. 43% of Americas poorest also pay zero or negative income tax.
You mean 43% of taxable Americans.  Or maybe I am reading that graph wrong?  I didn't see where it broke down the income levels of those 150 million 'tax units' that claimed negative or zero.  The reality is, and this will probably be painful for a few people to hear, but the small business owner is on average a bigger tax cheat than any other person in the US.  This was discussed in Freakanomics, there's been numerous studies that back it up too.  I'd reckon the data in your link probably reflects that sad reality, not the tax rates of the lowest 43% of taxable people. 

My former boss (a small business owner) made over $135k a year for about 5 years and managed to claim negative income every year.  Not exactly the poor fucking the system here - in fact its the very sector of our economy constantly championed as the backbone of the US.

Kmarion wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

I pay my taxes.  The last time I filed, I broke even.  So, contrary to your stats, I don't get money back from the government.
OIC, Turquoise pays his taxes and "break evens", so the tax policy center (which gets it's data from the IRS) must be wrong.
I wonder if Turq would be considered a part of that 43%?
If you pay zero you aren't taxable.

Here you can clearly see the trend by income level:
https://i33.tinypic.com/195b9s.jpg
Note that as income increases the amount of of people exempt decreases.


Turq is not part of that 43%. He is talking about not having to pay more when he FILES.. he had already paid what the IRS deemed the right amount on April 15.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
PureFodder
Member
+225|6691

Kmarion wrote:

FloppY_ wrote:

I dunno about you guys, but the danish TAX is dynamic, as in.. 41% is only the MINIMUM tax, if you earn a "decent" amount you pay 61%
Most of the US also has a state income tax, sales tax, and property taxes. They aren't going to show up on colorful graphs. Those are local revenue streams, and the Fed does not see any of it.
The colourful charts represent total US tax burden. Leading economists around the world are aware that there are state and federal taxes in the US.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7007|132 and Bush

The colorful chart was not very specific in detailing how it calculated revenue. Since it used the national GDP I can only assume that it only calculated what the IRS brings in.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
PureFodder
Member
+225|6691

Kmarion wrote:

The colorful chart was not very specific in detailing how it calculated revenue. Since it used the national GDP I can only assume that it only calculated what the IRS brings in.
You should send the expert economists at the OECD an email and explain to them how you think the US tax system works.

You may find that they know a hell of a lot more about it than you.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7007|132 and Bush

PureFodder wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

The colorful chart was not very specific in detailing how it calculated revenue. Since it used the national GDP I can only assume that it only calculated what the IRS brings in.
You should send the expert economists at the OECD an email and explain to them how you think the US tax system works.

You may find that they know a hell of a lot more about it than you.
I'm sure they do but this does not answer how they calculated revenue. An intelligent person would investigate the numbers behind the jpg in order to see the whole picture. This makes more sense than just accepting things at face value and belittling people who suggest there may be more to what is being shown.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
PureFodder
Member
+225|6691

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

The colorful chart was not very specific in detailing how it calculated revenue. Since it used the national GDP I can only assume that it only calculated what the IRS brings in.
You should send the expert economists at the OECD an email and explain to them how you think the US tax system works.

You may find that they know a hell of a lot more about it than you.
I'm sure they do but this does not answer how they calculated revenue. An intelligent person would investigate the numbers behind the jpg in order to see the whole picture. This makes more sense than just accepting things at face value and belittling people who suggest there may be more to what is being shown.
The data are collected in a way that makes them as internationally comparable as possible. Country representatives have agreed on the definitions of each type of tax and how they should be measured in all OECD countries, and they are then responsible for submitting data that conform to these rules.
http://lysander.sourceoecd.org/vl=87906 … /index.htm
happy?

Incidentally you assumed that the 'colourful chart' made by the OECD was wrong, belittled it, and believed that you knew better than them, despite not knowing whether they were or not.

They turned out to be right.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7007|132 and Bush

That is still very open ended. I want to know exactly how they got their numbers. I have yet to see "we got these numbers by ___". If it is to be all inclusive it should say that these numbers include state, local, and county taxes as well.

I've admitted that they know more than I do. You probably do as well, considering your apparent obsession with discussing the US's domestic policy. That does not mean that a person shouldnt ask for more information and the details behind the numbers.

I was talking about belittling a person who contends that there may be more behind a posted image. There is a big difference between personally calling out someones knowledge amongst "experts", and suggesting that although "colorful", the image is overtly simple. Things, especially in economics, are rarely that basic. This is especially true when dealing with multiple levels of government.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Spark
liquid fluoride thorium reactor
+874|7081|Canberra, AUS

Kmarion wrote:

That is still very open ended. I want to know exactly how they got their numbers. I have yet to see "we got these numbers by ___". If it is to be all inclusive it should say that these numbers include state, local, and county taxes as well.

I've admitted that they know more than I do. You probably do as well, considering your apparent obsession with discussing the US's domestic policy. That does not mean that a person shouldnt ask for more information and the details behind the numbers.

I was talking about belittling a person who contends that there may be more behind a posted image. There is a big difference between personally calling out someones knowledge amongst "experts", and suggesting that although "colorful", the image is overtly simple. Things, especially in economics, are rarely that basic. This is especially true when dealing with multiple levels of government.
I'm learning that now, I decided to crash self-learn economics...

One of the big things I'm learning is big picture vs. what sounds nice.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
PureFodder
Member
+225|6691

Kmarion wrote:

That is still very open ended. I want to know exactly how they got their numbers. I have yet to see "we got these numbers by ___". If it is to be all inclusive it should say that these numbers include state, local, and county taxes as well.

I've admitted that they know more than I do. You probably do as well, considering your apparent obsession with discussing the US's domestic policy. That does not mean that a person shouldnt ask for more information and the details behind the numbers.

I was talking about belittling a person who contends that there may be more behind a posted image. There is a big difference between personally calling out someones knowledge amongst "experts", and suggesting that although "colorful", the image is overtly simple. Things, especially in economics, are rarely that basic. This is especially true when dealing with multiple levels of government.
Most countries have some form on local tax generation, for example in the UK we have a council tax that goes directly towards local government as opposed to the national government. That's why a tax burden has to include all generated taxes. Total tax generated is a simple measure that takes some significant effort to put together, hence why it's only organisations with the time and resources to collect that information like the OECD that publish it.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6817|'Murka

Turquoise wrote:

Corporate taxes are high here as compared to many other countries because of our relatively low personal taxes.

Most of the other countries on that graph have considerably higher personal income taxes than we do -- especially for their wealthiest people.

To make up for this, we tax corporations more than they do.  It's a balance of taxing the corporations vs. taxing individuals.
Funny...when you look at the numbers for the source link, it shows the US income tax rate is roughly the same range as just about every other country. With the highest tax rates being levied on the richest Americans.

Those pesky facts kind of shoot your thesis right in the ass, Turq.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
PureFodder
Member
+225|6691

FEOS wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Corporate taxes are high here as compared to many other countries because of our relatively low personal taxes.

Most of the other countries on that graph have considerably higher personal income taxes than we do -- especially for their wealthiest people.

To make up for this, we tax corporations more than they do.  It's a balance of taxing the corporations vs. taxing individuals.
Funny...when you look at the numbers for the source link, it shows the US income tax rate is roughly the same range as just about every other country. With the highest tax rates being levied on the richest Americans.

Those pesky facts kind of shoot your thesis right in the ass, Turq.
Tax rates are meaningless. Taxes paid are what's important, they are the actual facts. The problem being that actual taxes paid, expecially when you want to look at which socio-economic groups paid how much in multiple countries becomes an obscenely difficult task. One example of this is as you look at people with higher and higher incomes, there is a tendency to represent (sometimes wrongfully) income as capital gains which tends to have a lower tax rate in most countries than income tax. A variety of loopholes and tax havens begin to become more readily exploitable as your income rises as you can more easily afford accountants to search for them and have a more diverse revenue stream to push money around in. This often leads to high income people paying a smaller percentage of their total income as tax than the relatively weathly middle class.

The total tax burden in the US appears to be relatively low in comparison to most rich countries.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6817|'Murka

PureFodder wrote:

The total tax burden in the US appears to be relatively low in comparison to most rich countries.
Based on what, exactly?

When state, local, sales, fuel, and other taxes are added in, the tax rate on the average American is comparable to most other "rich" countries.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
PureFodder
Member
+225|6691

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

The total tax burden in the US appears to be relatively low in comparison to most rich countries.
Based on what, exactly?

When state, local, sales, fuel, and other taxes are added in, the tax rate on the average American is comparable to most other "rich" countries.
Taxes are defined as compulsory, unrequited payments to general government. They are unrequited in the sense that benefits provided by government to taxpayers are not normally in proportion to their payments.

Taxes on incomes and profits cover taxes levied on the net income or profits (gross income minus allowable tax reliefs) of individuals and enterprises. They also cover taxes levied on the capital gains of individuals and enterprises, and gains from gambling.

Taxes on goods and services cover all taxes levied on the production, extraction, sale, transfer, leasing or delivery of goods, and the rendering of services, or on the use of goods or permission to use goods or to perform activities. They consist mainly of value added and sales taxes.


The data are collected in a way that makes them as internationally comparable as possible. Country representatives have agreed on the definitions of each type of tax and how they should be measured in all OECD countries, and they are then responsible for submitting data that conform to these rules.
It's tax income raised for general government (not just federal) and includes sales, fuel etc. taxes

What are you basing your assertion that the US pays a comparable amount, got a source?

Just to make it more clear the US federal tax revenue for 2007 was about $2.7 trillion and the total GDP was $14.2 trillion (2008) so the Faderal tax revenue is less than 20% GDP. The figures from the OECD therefore can't be jsut federal taxes and must include state and local taxes too.

Last edited by PureFodder (2009-07-28 04:58:27)

Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6811|North Carolina

Kmarion wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

Kmarion wrote:


I'm pretty sure the UK is estremly low as well.  Actually, it is at the bottom.
More recent information:
http://i38.tinypic.com/34eycxx.jpg
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8162616.stm
Yep, we have the most similar policies to the US and the expected results.

Kmarion wrote:

Maybe showing you the relative size of each governed population can help you understand why I think size matters when governing large populations of people. The smaller the better chance of success.
Denmark-5,511,451
Norway-4,812,200
Finland-5,340,093
Canada-33,726,000

France-65,073,482
US-307,002,000
Italy- 60,045,068
UK-61,612,300
By what mechanism can population size make a difference? For example Germany has the second highest populations of the rich western countries and one of the best social mobilities, higher than that of Norway.

Look at the report that it's based on and it goes into lots of detail about how much government policies influence this. From helathcare to education these policies can be geared to giving everyone as equal a chance as possible or not. The US and UK typically don't go overly after equality regardless of parental income whereas other countries enact policies with that aim in mind.
Germany is not a typical case. Perhaps rebuilding the country over the last few generations (the postwar era) has helped present more opportunity? Or maybe it's the fact that their military spending is nearly nil, and they can afford to tax and donate to the downtrodden?
It sounds like we need to cut military spending some.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6811|North Carolina

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

I wonder if Turq would be considered a part of that 43%?
I had thought I was, but according to that chart, I'm not.

FEOS wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Corporate taxes are high here as compared to many other countries because of our relatively low personal taxes.

Most of the other countries on that graph have considerably higher personal income taxes than we do -- especially for their wealthiest people.

To make up for this, we tax corporations more than they do.  It's a balance of taxing the corporations vs. taxing individuals.
Funny...when you look at the numbers for the source link, it shows the US income tax rate is roughly the same range as just about every other country. With the highest tax rates being levied on the richest Americans.

Those pesky facts kind of shoot your thesis right in the ass, Turq.
Look at the chart again and get back to me.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6817|'Murka

PureFodder wrote:

It's tax income raised for general government (not just federal) and includes sales, fuel etc. taxes

What are you basing your assertion that the US pays a comparable amount, got a source?
http://www.concurrencefiscale.ch/papers … -Index.pdf

http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/publicat … ID=1000976

OECD Report wrote:

Compared with other OECD countries, the United States relies more heavily on income taxes as a source of revenue and less on taxes on goods and services. In 2003 the United States raised 43.3 percent of its revenue from corporate and personal income taxes, compared with 30.5 percent for the rest of the G7 and 34.3 percent for non-G7 OECD countries. But unlike other OECD countries, the United States does not impose a value-added or other form of national sales tax. Consequently, the U.S. share of revenue raised from taxes on goods and services (state sales taxes and state and federal excise taxes on selected commodities) was only 18.2 percent, compared with 26 percent in other G7 countries and 32.6 percent in non-G7 OECD countries.
Here is a listing of all taxes in the US. Unfortunately, state and local taxes vary so much that there is no data I can find that consolidates it all in one place. Some sources (news and radio primarily, so no sourcing I can find online) have pegged the overall tax rates, when marginal taxes are taken into account (sales, fuel, property, etc) of upwards of 70% for the highest income levels when one combines all federal, state, and local taxes paid each year.

If you look at it from the perspective of how long the average US worker has to work each year just to pay his or her Federal taxes alone (Apr 13th for 2009), that is roughly 25% of the year spent just to pay Federal taxes. Add state and local on top of that (again, they vary greatly, with some states taxing on par with the feds and some states having zero income but higher consumption and property taxes), and you quickly approach 50% on average.

As for corporate rates, here's a study from the CBO that is quite enlightening (see pages 18-24...roughly).

PF wrote:

Just to make it more clear the US federal tax revenue for 2007 was about $2.7 trillion and the total GDP was $14.2 trillion (2008) so the Faderal tax revenue is less than 20% GDP. The figures from the OECD therefore can't be jsut federal taxes and must include state and local taxes too.
So explain again how "Federal tax revenue" is more than just federal taxes? Federal tax revenue is revenue generated from federal taxes alone and does not include state or local taxes.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6817|'Murka

Turquoise wrote:

Look at the chart again and get back to me.
Look at

FEOS wrote:

numbers for the source link
and get back to me.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
PureFodder
Member
+225|6691

FEOS wrote:

PureFodder wrote:

It's tax income raised for general government (not just federal) and includes sales, fuel etc. taxes

What are you basing your assertion that the US pays a comparable amount, got a source?
http://www.concurrencefiscale.ch/papers … -Index.pdf

http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/publicat … ID=1000976

OECD Report wrote:

Compared with other OECD countries, the United States relies more heavily on income taxes as a source of revenue and less on taxes on goods and services. In 2003 the United States raised 43.3 percent of its revenue from corporate and personal income taxes, compared with 30.5 percent for the rest of the G7 and 34.3 percent for non-G7 OECD countries. But unlike other OECD countries, the United States does not impose a value-added or other form of national sales tax. Consequently, the U.S. share of revenue raised from taxes on goods and services (state sales taxes and state and federal excise taxes on selected commodities) was only 18.2 percent, compared with 26 percent in other G7 countries and 32.6 percent in non-G7 OECD countries.
Here is a listing of all taxes in the US. Unfortunately, state and local taxes vary so much that there is no data I can find that consolidates it all in one place. Some sources (news and radio primarily, so no sourcing I can find online) have pegged the overall tax rates, when marginal taxes are taken into account (sales, fuel, property, etc) of upwards of 70% for the highest income levels when one combines all federal, state, and local taxes paid each year.

If you look at it from the perspective of how long the average US worker has to work each year just to pay his or her Federal taxes alone (Apr 13th for 2009), that is roughly 25% of the year spent just to pay Federal taxes. Add state and local on top of that (again, they vary greatly, with some states taxing on par with the feds and some states having zero income but higher consumption and property taxes), and you quickly approach 50% on average.

As for corporate rates, here's a study from the CBO that is quite enlightening (see pages 18-24...roughly).

PF wrote:

Just to make it more clear the US federal tax revenue for 2007 was about $2.7 trillion and the total GDP was $14.2 trillion (2008) so the Faderal tax revenue is less than 20% GDP. The figures from the OECD therefore can't be jsut federal taxes and must include state and local taxes too.
So explain again how "Federal tax revenue" is more than just federal taxes? Federal tax revenue is revenue generated from federal taxes alone and does not include state or local taxes.
It's very simply. The OECD gives the tax burden on US citizens at around 30% GDP. The argument against this was that this figure neglects state and local taxes, sales taxes etc and only represents federal taxes. The figures I gave clearly show that the Federal tax burden is less than 20% GDP therefore the OECD figure of around 30% must include other taxes. If you look at the source they explicitly state that they include sales taxes and give their values. If you look at state tax revenues as well, the amounts vary from state to state but typicaly average below 10% GDP.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_tax_ … ted_States

Overall you can see that combined state,sales and federal taxes are still below the OECD figure of about 30% GDP.

All the data of actual tax burden (as opposed to the meaningless figure of tax rate) point to the OECD data being right. The tax burden on Americans is lower than most rich western countries.
FEOS
Bellicose Yankee Air Pirate
+1,182|6817|'Murka

If you look at the actual data behind the graph in the OECD report from your earlier post, the US is within 2% of the OECD figure. Hardly worth splitting that hair, tbh.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein

Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular

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