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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Your refusal to say where you've read the arguments doesn't really seem to be in good faith to me. Three times now. If you were capable of finding references to the Constitution, one presumes you were capable of finding the arguments you read, too. Could it be that they were not quite as definitive as you want to make them out to be? One wonders. | |||
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Minor Deity |
No, no - nothing to do with inheritance taxes (which even under Dems starts with ~ $5MM exemption. Which, if I need say, is waayyy above my threshhold). As for life insurance to protect against such taxes, even if one were living in an era where their relatively modest estates were at serious risk of being depleted, I am WAY over the age where one could reasonably take out such a policy! What do you think my premiums would be assessed at? But again, this doesn't begin to apply to my "estate" even at the original "Hilary/Obama" threshhold - which FWIW was also set to increase with inflation. Perhaps you aren't aware of the whole issue of resetting the "basis"of property inherited at death. According to this allowance, the federal capital gains tax ordinarily assessed when property is sold, is cancelled when the property changes hands upon a death. To be specific, our land was a gift and thus its basis is zero (ouch, just considering it) so that whenever it's sold the entire value must be taxed as profit. OTOH, if say, a child inherits said land, that taxable profit is erased and the heir can sell it without being required to pay capital gains - at least 15% and up to 25% when last I checked, as a function of several factors. It's not Trump-worthy acreage but acquiring it as an inheritance, would make a six figure difference benefiting that son (it was originally given to him and his brother, but explaining its peregrinations of ownership risks taking the narrative too far afield). Thanks for the suggestions!
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Quirt - I confess I’ve seen no commentary that differentiates a Federal wealth tax proposal from existing property taxes. Most commenters probably assume their readers would know that the relevant sections of the constitution constrain the federal government and not local governments. But if I see it addressed somewhere I’ll let you know. Maybe Vox will ‘splain it.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Or maybe Warren has a way around it. I confess that I've read nothing more than what's in this thread, and I am not a tax expert. I prefer to rely on people who actually do this for a living. | |||
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
There are certainly knowledgeable folks to be found on each side of this. As you know nothing is definitively unconstitutional until the current court says so.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
I know nothing about Warren's proposal beyond what's been discussed here. This showed up in my news feed and I thought I'd throw it out there for others who are following it more closely. https://www.latimes.com/busine...-20190125-story.html
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Pinta & the Santa Maria Has Achieved Nirvana |
I think it's worth making a distinction between earned income (e.g., wages) and other income (interest, investments, yada yada). If we're talking about folks who make north of, say, $20M per year in wages, we're really talking only about celebrities and athletes and the occasional CEO. Those aren't the people that Warren wants to get. She wants the fat cat business people and their beneficiaries/families/trust fund people. It definitely has some political power. It's also very unlikely to ever pass. My 2c. | |||
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
I didn't see the LAT piece but ran across the journal article yesterday, its the article that people point to when they want to say this is constitutional. I doubt the federalist society would support the logic of the piece, and that's who's feeding us supreme court justices these days. But as Nina says, I don't think we'll ever find out.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
One other problem worth mentioning, which has a lot to do with why so many countries have abandoned wealth taxes. THey're really hard to administer. Stock in public companies is fine. But what about really illiquid stuff that some of these very wealthy people own? What is Trump International worth? Bechtel? Palentir? For any particular sum you might want to raise by taxing capital, it still seems more efficient to do it through the capital gains rate. Just by eliminating the step-up basis, which seems like an obvious loophole to close, we would probably get $100B a year. You could buy a lot of
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Out of curiosity, how do you imagine the Federalist Society distinguishes estate and gift taxes? | |||
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Does This Avatar Make My Butt Look Big? Minor Deity |
Wait, what? Are people really suggesting that a wealth tax would be unconstitutional? Well, I am far from a constitutional law specialist, but I think that argument is bananas. From the article:
No, no, no. "Apportioned among the states" ought to mean that the federal government cannot pass a tax that only applies to people in one state versus another. Trump cannot raise taxes on NY and CA while not also raising taxes on people in WV. So long as a wealth tax applied to people in California and people in Mississippi, it is apportioned among the states. So says Justice Sphinx. | |||
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Does This Avatar Make My Butt Look Big? Minor Deity |
On the merits: I just don't see a wealth tax working. What you would have is a giant sucking sound as wealthy people move assets off-shore or transfer assets to shell corporations or trusts or whatever. I think you also see a ripple effect throughout the economy in the real estate market. If I am a fat cat and I own a shopping mall or office building, it instantly becomes less valuable if I am going to have to pay additional tax on it for every year I own it. And as a practical matter . . . Dems need to calm down. Most people in this country are not moved by "soak the rich" schemes that are this bold. They mostly want jobs and they want wages to rise. They want health care. For every Dem you energize with this, there is an independent who wonders if proponents are socialists, communists, or worse. If you rock the boat too much, Dems, it can sink on you. | |||
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
I think they would say the fact that the tax is initiated by a transfer makes it indirect.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Indeed that’s what SCOTUS said:
https://taxfoundation.org/warr...x-constitutionality/
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
By the way, I believe it’s the case that the Federalist Society types think Pollack was wrongly decided and that the income tax was indirect. Some of them do anyway. IOW the income taxes should have been legal even w/o the 16th amendment.
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