ironphoenix (
ironphoenix) wrote2008-09-16 01:05 pm
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
Ganked from
metahacker
This graph says it all, really.1 Republicans are for the rich. It's that simple.
Why do so many poor and middle-class people vote for them?
1: Well, not really. It doesn't show the cuts to social programs that the Republican tax plan necessarily implies because of the reduction in net tax revenues, which generally hit low-income folks harder.
Why do so many poor and middle-class people vote for them?
1: Well, not really. It doesn't show the cuts to social programs that the Republican tax plan necessarily implies because of the reduction in net tax revenues, which generally hit low-income folks harder.
no subject
Well, kind of, at least... maybe I'm not being entirely even-handed, there. The fair comparison might not be the delta from the status quo, but rather the net tax rate proposed by the two candidates. (Sadly, I don't have such a graph.) In that analysis, I think we'd find that neither party is adhering to a philosophical ideal, but that both are picking compromise positions that are, in the overall scheme, not as far apart as the graph I linked to would suggest. Despite all that, I still see the change being proposed by the Republicans as taking from the poor and giving to the rich, and I have a hard time not seeing that as being "government interference" of the worst kind.
So, to put you on the spot, how would you structure taxes, starting from a clean sheet of paper?
no subject
See much as I understand why we have a progressive system here, I would have no problem with a flat tax rate. But I would want it coupled with
a) an exemption for the first X dollars which would denote a at least a minimumally livable level (e..g the poverty line) which would not be taxed.
b) no other exemptions or loopholes or clever put-asides or tax shelters
c) a much lower rate since closing all the loopholes should mean that a flat tax wouldn't need to be more than 20%, possibly even lower.
Given that clever people will always find loopholes (oh hai, my money is now in offshore accounts, profits, no that's a loss oh noes my poor company oh woes) I don't think this system would work. But wouldn't it be nice in an idealized world?
no subject
Minimum livable depends on where you live. Compare housing prices in Ottawa, ON and say, Riverside-Albert, NB.
Overall, instead of a flat tax, I prefer a smooth subsidy-tax curve which crosses a zero-tax, zero-subsidy point somewhere significantly above the bare minimum survival level, in order to provide a positive incentive to low-income people while ensuring that zero-income people can survive.