The Bookerman
Member
this man is not happy with the republicans.
Nerevar said:And I'll reiterate, is that a joke post or a troll? Because quite frankly, if you think people who make $100,000+ of their income are spending roughly equal amounts of their budget on basic necessities like food and transportation as people below the poverty line (of which there are over 32 million in this country), anyone with any basic grasp of personal finance isn't going to take you seriously.
Uh, do you even read your own links?Lathentar said:Infact... this report will take me seriously and prove my point.
http://www.bls.gov/opub/ils/pdf/opbils26.pdf
Almost IDENTICAL spending as a percentage of income. Could you please provide a report supporting your statements?
Hitokage said:Uh, do you even read your own links?
On average, high-income households
spent about $15,000 more on housing than other
households. However, the share of total spending
on housing by the two groups was very
similarabout 31 percent each.
Food. Households with annual incomes of
$90,000 or more allocated just over 11 percent
of their total expenditures on food and 51
percent of that on food away from home. The
figures for the other households were 14
percent and 37 percent, respectively.
and 5.6 percent, respectively.
On average, high-income
households spent more than twice as much
($12,521) on transportation than did other
households ($5,690). These outlays, however,
reflected less than 16 percent of the high-income
households total expenditures and
almost 19 percent of the other households total
spending.
In only about a 1/3 of the states are food items taxed. And just to add, prepared foods (like fast food and normal restaurants) are treated like non-food items and are taxed. But prepared foods in a grocery store (like frozen meals) are not taxed unless the grocery store prepares the item.Hitokage said:Oh, and food is taxed, but depending on the state it may be a different rate than nonfood products, or even prepared food. In NC, the food grocery tax is 2%, but AFAIK prepared food is taxed about the same as nonfood goods... at 7%.
Dan said:I think it's unfair to tax the rich a higher percentage. I don't see how you countered that in any form.
One little example: Gov. McGreevey of NJ is planning to raise taxes for the richest 26,000 families in New Jersey by 3%, bringing their total tax rate to 8 or 9%. The money gained from this is going directly to senior citizens and the poor. I really don't see what's fair about that. It seems to be straight-up stealing to me.
I think the problem is that the parts you quote show that the spending habits are similar... it's just that the percentages for the wealthier are only considering the portion that they actually spend, which the chart shows to be about 60% of the income.Lathentar said:The graph at the bottom with total income/total expenditures seems to contradict what I'm saying. I will admit that.
Food. Households with annual incomes of
$90,000 or more allocated just over 11 percent
of their total expenditures on food and 51
percent of that on food away from home. The
figures for the other households were 14
percent and 37 percent, respectively.
On average, high-income
households spent more than twice as much
($12,521) on transportation than did other
households ($5,690). These outlays, however,
reflected less than 16 percent of the high-income
households total expenditures and
almost 19 percent of the other households total
spending.
JoshuaJSlone said:I think the problem is that the parts you quote show that the spending habits are similar... it's just that the percentages for the wealthier are only considering the portion that they actually spend, which the chart shows to be about 60% of the income.
Recheck your source.Hitokage said:No, it's a state tax, that much I know for sure.
http://www.dor.state.nc.us/publications/2003stateandlocal.pdfThe State levies a general retail sales and use tax of 4.5% (the rate increased from 4% effective
October 16, 2001 and is scheduled to return to 4% effective July 1, 2005). By July 1, 2003, all 100 North
Carolina counties had adopted the one-half cent county tax increasing the local sales and use tax to 2.5%.
As a result, the combined general State and county tax rate is 7% in all counties except Mecklenburg
County, which has a rate of 7½% (due to a ½% Public Transit Tax). The State exempts food from sales
and use tax except for certain classifications, however a local sales and use tax of 2% still applies to all
food. (Food items subject to taxation include dietary supplements, food sold from vending machines,
alcoholic beverages, soft drinks, and prepared food. Candy is subject to taxation unless it is purchased for
home consumption and would be eligible for purchase with food stamps under the Federal Food Stamp
Program; all candy will be exempt after 2003.)
Nerevar said:Wow, just wow. No offense, but this is JUST PLAIN WRONG
What percent of your budget goes to paying groceries? To paying rent? To paying fees like car repair and the gas / mass transit fare for the daily commute? If you're like most people, that is the vast majority of your budget. And guess what - that amount of money stays the same whether you're rich as all hell or living day-to-day. Because in the end, Dick Cheney and John Kerry eat roughly the same as the poor single mother of two who lives in the housing projects. And under a flat national sales tax, they all pay the same in taxes for that food. A flat tax is a perfect way to tax the poor into starvation.
Only someone who is too rich to have to worry about managing enough money to pay for groceries would think a flat sales tax or VAT would be fair.
Well the problem is that an application of a flat rate itself won't end all the different credits, deductions, loopholes and exemptions that make those problems. But I agree that efforts to lower rates and limit base reductions are A Good Thing. They already try to do this by creating phaseouts for people with higher income(stealth tax!), which is good, but it still doesn't always get the job done, and it makes the code much more complicated.Ignatz Mouse said:This is all smoke and mirrors, even the talk of regressive taxes.
If you cut out most of the incentives and loopholes and other relatively-hidden payouts to various groups or classes, you could drop tax rates (be they flat or progressive) a ton.
The allure of a flat tax, to me, is the abolishment of loopholes, so that the wealthier *will* and up paying more, becuase they aren't getting the breaks they once did.
Then you have to figure out what the impact to the economy of losing those breaks and loopholes really is. The obvious one is the break homeowners get on their mortgage interest. That's pretty hardcore middle class. I'm sure the beefier ones are better disguised.
[b]Company Income Tax(Refund) Rate[/b]
Enron 1,785 (381) (21.34)%
El Paso Energy 1,638 (254) (15.51)%
Goodyear 442 (23) (5.2)%
Navistar 1,368 28 2.05%
GM 12,468 740 5.94%
LuckyBrand said:really? millionaires eat the same exact food as poor people in the projects?
damn, i always assumed if i was to be rich one day, i'd eat lobster every day, 3 times a day... and other nice food items...
but i guess it will be processed cheese sammiches forever.
Bah, I could have sworn I saw reports of discussions about it in the state legislature in the newspaper... maybe it was that they were phasing it out from the state level.AirBrian said:
really? millionaires eat the same exact food as poor people in the projects?
damn, i always assumed if i was to be rich one day, i'd eat lobster every day, 3 times a day... and other nice food items...
but i guess it will be processed cheese sammiches forever.
Pimpwerx said:A VAT isn't a bad idea, but wages need to be normalized first. Until you draw some parity in what people earn, then a VAT is only going to benefit the rich and screw the little guy. But all things being equal, a VAT is a good thing IMO. As for getting rid of the IRS, yeah right. A cheap ploy. PEACE.
The more equal the pieces, the smaller the pie.
Gregory said:I`ve never understood your tax politics. Where I come from the average people pay around 30% tax and the wealthiest up to 50%. We have great welfare and social programs, free healthcare for everyone, free college for everyone, 5 fully paid weeks of vacation every year, and overall the best standard of living on the world, atleast according to UN.
But I guess this isn`t exactly the american dream, which seems to be about grabbing as much as can you for yourself.
Azih said:Edit: Since California has a bigger economy than Canada and has roughly the same number of people, than California could provide better services to its population that Canada does.
Azih said:Edit: Since California has a bigger economy than Canada and has roughly the same number of people, than California could provide better services to its population that Canada does.
maharg said:That sounds like a bit of a tangent loki. I realize it impacts the practical implications of the argument, but it's still a separate issue that probably deserves its own, separate, debate. It's also worth noting that California actually has 5 million more people period, and that may have some impact on the validity of this problem to the debate at hand.
Check this out for what it looks like if you split *everything* up into its constituent regions. Look at Washington DC go.
this is both off-topic and wrong.Loki said:You're neglecting the 2.5-5.5 million illegal immigrants (estimates vary) who drain California's healthcare (go read some accounts of ER/Ob-Gyn docs in Cali; Cali hospitals had to be bailed out by the gov't for precisely these reasons) and educational resources without contributing anything to the tax base which subsidizes such provisions. Does Canada as a nation have 3M+ illegals? It's doubtful, since as of Canada's 1991 census, there were only 4.3M immigrants total (legal+illegal) comprising 16% of the population. I doubt that 75%+ of these were illegals (i.e., non-tax paying; after a good 10-15 minutes of searching, I couldn't find an accurate figure for this). Even assuming that the number has increased since '91, California's numbers dwarf Canada's in terms of the actual number of illegals, and, hence, the percentage of the population they comprise (since the populations are relatively equal).