Blind groper wrote:Mitt Romney admitted that his tax level was 15%.
So? That's more than what half the country is paying, which is zero percent.
Warren Buffett said he paid less tax than his secretary.
Did he tell you how much his secretary makes? No, he did not. His secretary is probably in the top 20 percent.
Buffett is something of an exception, in having a strong altruism (he donates billions to charities), and he stated clearly (including in a communication to Obama) that he, Buffett, should be paying more tax.
Lying sack of shit. He can pay all the taxes he wants. The IRS has a special account specifically for people who want to pay more tax than they owe. Buffett doesn't make use of it.
One of the things about the very rich is that a large percentage of their earnings are capital gain, which is not taxed in most western nations.
Don't know about there, but here in the US it's taxed at 15 percent, plus, in my case, 5 percent state capital gains tax (you forget state taxes don't you). And that rate is set for everyone, from Romney and Buffett all the way down to the individual small investor by Congress in order to stimulate investment. By the way, if you're in the 25 percent or lower tax bracket, your capital gains tax this year is ZERO, thanks to Congress, so the rich are STILL paying more than the poor folks.
Another tactic is to make full use of offshore tax havens. Neither of these methods are available to the poor or middle class.
Sure they are. But they're also largely illegal.
A common tactic (which is illegal, but still rather frequently done), is to use an offshore bank which cooperates with the investor, by hiding details. If the business is importing, they get their suppliers to invoice them twice - once at a high rate. They pay the supplier at the true, lower rate, and the difference goes into the offshore bank, while the tax office gets shown the higher rate invoice. Thus they declare a false lower profit. The reverse happens with an exporter.
Which is tax fraud, which will get your business shut down. You can't use examples of criminality to argue that "the rich" don't pay taxes because it's simply not true.
There are lots of tactics like this. Some legal, and some illegal. End result is low taxes paid by those wealthy enough to have tax lawyers and accountants at their beck and call.
And still they manage to pay 97 percent of the taxes collected. Amazing.
In the USA, and many other western nations, there is a trend towards a widening of the gap between rich and poor. A big reason for this is tax avoidance and tax evasion by the rich. A 'cure' for this disparity is to make taxation fairer once more, and ensure the wealthy pay a solid whack of the government's needs.
Horseshit. You have absolutely no evidence to prove this allegation. I say that the biggest reason is the expansion of the lazy, non-working socialist dependent class who want other people to pay for their support.
As I said before, this will not affect the standard of living of the very rich. Anyone with $500,000 per year or more will never need more money to satisfy their wants and needs.
It's not up to you to determine what someone else's "wants and needs" are. They get to determine that, and if they can make enough money to satisfy their wants and needs at whatever level, more power to them because it means that they are part of the productive class who works hard to earn what they own.
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