The Tax Bill Itself
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An English language explanation of the bill:
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Originally posted by billyjoe View PostI don't know if this is true, but I was told an individual making 12 million would be keeping an extra $2000 per day vs. old rate.
------------------billy
Is this too simplistic:
Max tax rate under the old plan = 39.6%, under the new = 37%. The difference is 2.6%.
$12,000,000 x .026 = $312,000 per year.
$312,000 per year / 365 days = $855 per day. That's for a wage earner, if you're pass thru or carried interest or something maybe it's different.
The biggest scam, I think, is talk of doubling the standard deduction. If you are married with three kids your standard deduction goes from (about) $12,000 to $24,000 but you lose the individual exemptions ($4050 I think) for 5 people ($20,250) so you have less, not more, net to deduct before you get to taxable income. Maybe I'm confused because nobody talks about this. Your tax rate does go down on what's left but not much.
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Originally posted by Louetta View Post
Family of 4 making $80,000/yr originally would be paying 12% tax, and as amended now pay:
10% on the first $19k
12% on the next $58k
22% on the rest.
Is this better, worse? More complicated, or less? Who knows... but at least married couples can now have a $24k standard deduction, which may help reduce taxes for those not taking $24k or more in deductions already.
Reminds me of the conversation I had at work when the original bill first came out with the 4 brackets. The guy was confused and butthurt about that. Not enough brackets! was all he had as an argument, which I really didn't get. Why? What's the problem with fewer brackets?
Oh well, I guess his argument held out in the end, as the Senate agrees with him... the more brackets, the better!Last edited by jiesen; 12-17-2017, 01:14 PM.
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Originally posted by Louetta View PostIs this too simplistic:
Max tax rate under the old plan = 39.6%, under the new = 37%. The difference is 2.6%.
$12,000,000 x .026 = $312,000 per year.
$312,000 per year / 365 days = $855 per day. That's for a wage earner, if you're pass thru or carried interest or something maybe it's different.
The biggest scam, I think, is talk of doubling the standard deduction. If you are married with three kids your standard deduction goes from (about) $12,000 to $24,000 but you lose the individual exemptions ($4050 I think) for 5 people ($20,250) so you have less, not more, net to deduct before you get to taxable income. Maybe I'm confused because nobody talks about this. Your tax rate does go down on what's left but not much.
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Originally posted by jiesen View PostThe real problem here is when you change multiple variables in the equation, which all impact different families differently, it's impossible to say whose taxes go up and whose go down, without doing a separate calculation for everyone. Nobody around is good enough at the tax math to do it correctly, so everyone just ends up with confusion and butthurt every time it changes, regardless of whether they are good or bad changes. Only real way to fix that is to simplify it to the point where most can understand the damn math, and what the changes actually mean to them.My Investopedia portfolio
(You need to have a (free) Investopedia or Facebook login, sorry!)
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I love the debate about who benefits - rich or poor? I am of the opinion that most rich people got that way by being smarter with money than poor people. You can tax, penalize, change the rules all you want, but it won't make wealthy people dumber or poor people smarter. Most of the wealthy will get to know the new rules, adjust their behavior, and keep on building wealth because they are smart enough to come out ahead under almost any system. Poor people will keep on complaining about the rich and the government who taxes them. I know, I know, I'm just a big meanie.Math doesn't lie, but people do.
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Originally posted by Louetta View PostIs this too simplistic:
Max tax rate under the old plan = 39.6%, under the new = 37%. The difference is 2.6%.
$12,000,000 x .026 = $312,000 per year.
$312,000 per year / 365 days = $855 per day. That's for a wage earner, if you're pass thru or carried interest or something maybe it's different.
The biggest scam, I think, is talk of doubling the standard deduction. If you are married with three kids your standard deduction goes from (about) $12,000 to $24,000 but you lose the individual exemptions ($4050 I think) for 5 people ($20,250) so you have less, not more, net to deduct before you get to taxable income. Maybe I'm confused because nobody talks about this. Your tax rate does go down on what's left but not much.
The 2010 Census enumerated 308.7 million people in the United States, a 9.7 percent increase from 281.4 million in Census 2000. Of the total population in 2010, 300.8 million lived in 116.7 million households for an average of 2.58 people per household.Tim - Retired Problem Solver
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Originally posted by mimo_100 View PostNot sure why you used 5 exemptions in your example. The average household size is about 3.
The 2010 Census enumerated 308.7 million people in the United States, a 9.7 percent increase from 281.4 million in Census 2000. Of the total population in 2010, 300.8 million lived in 116.7 million households for an average of 2.58 people per household.
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Originally posted by blindsquirrel View PostI love the debate about who benefits - rich or poor? I am of the opinion that most rich people got that way by being smarter with money than poor people. You can tax, penalize, change the rules all you want, but it won't make wealthy people dumber or poor people smarter. Most of the wealthy will get to know the new rules, adjust their behavior, and keep on building wealth because they are smart enough to come out ahead under almost any system. Poor people will keep on complaining about the rich and the government who taxes them. I know, I know, I'm just a big meanie.
----------------billy
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Originally posted by Louetta View PostI'm glad you brought that up. So a single mother's standard deduction goes from about $6,000 to about $12,000, an increase of $6,000. If she has one child (2.00 people per household) she loses 2x$4,050 = $8100. If two kids (3.00 people per household) 3x$4,050 = $12,150. The point is people are arguing about pass-thrus and carried interest and ignoring what affects the average person. P.S. I finally did hear a guy on the tube mention this.Tim - Retired Problem Solver
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