PSA: Tax Hikes Are Coming
| Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/14/14 | | Boyish low-t deer antler locale | 12/14/14 | | Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/14/14 | | titillating range giraffe | 12/14/14 | | Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/14/14 | | ebony costumed business firm | 12/17/14 | | Pontificating round eye | 12/17/14 | | blathering lodge prole | 12/17/14 | | Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/17/14 | | Fantasy-prone irradiated theater | 12/17/14 | | yellow gaping | 12/17/14 | | Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/17/14 | | Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/17/14 | | Fantasy-prone irradiated theater | 12/17/14 | | Frum tanning salon | 12/17/14 | | Fantasy-prone irradiated theater | 12/17/14 | | Pontificating round eye | 12/17/14 | | Fantasy-prone irradiated theater | 12/17/14 | | Offensive site | 12/17/14 | | Fantasy-prone irradiated theater | 12/17/14 | | Pontificating round eye | 12/17/14 | | Obsidian sandwich | 12/17/14 | | Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/17/14 | | Harsh hideous base | 12/17/14 | | Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/17/14 | | Pontificating round eye | 12/17/14 | | lilac travel guidebook | 12/17/14 | | Balding Stage | 12/17/14 | | Dashing aquamarine community account | 12/18/14 |
Poast new message in this thread
Date: December 14th, 2014 4:53 PM Author: Dashing aquamarine community account
Gas tax, income tax, property tax, sales tax are all going to skyrocket in near future to pay for the past 40 years of boomers giving gifts to themselves on credit. Once they stop working, driving, consuming, etc., they will immediately jack up all taxes.
I for one am trying to learn portuguese and plan for an escape to South America (and hopefully living cheaply enough to use § 911 election or renounce citizenship if my income is trending higher). If you aren't indirectly benefiting from this in the form of increased parental wealth, you are insane to stay. They will bleed you dry and work you to death. And this is just to get back to even, covering the huge hole they created. It won't benefit us or our kids.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2756303&forum_id=2#26929264) |
Date: December 17th, 2014 8:54 PM Author: Fantasy-prone irradiated theater
Republicans hate VAT's because of how much hidden taxation it results in; Democrats hate VAT's because they're regressive. The day that Republicans realize a VAT is regressive and Democrats realize how much hidden taxing they can do is the day we'll finally have a VAT.
Or whatever the quote is.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2756303&forum_id=2#26952190) |
|
Date: December 17th, 2014 9:42 PM Author: Offensive site
I think they are going to do something about ROTH accounts in the next 10-15 years. It's getting crazy how much you can get in a ROTH these days through after-tax 401k contributions and roth conversions.
Since flat out taxing distributions and growth (again) will be too obvious, they are going to pull something sneaky.
My idea is that that the govt will basically start stacking other income on top of a ROTH distributions to push people into higher tax brackets. Combine this with narrower tax brackets to really screw people.
Most of the country will not even be able to figure out what hit them.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2756303&forum_id=2#26952578) |
Date: December 18th, 2014 12:18 AM Author: Dashing aquamarine community account
http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/law_econ/2014/12/the-us-crude-oil-export-ban-is-a-simple-transfer-payment-from-motorists-to-domestic-refiners.html
The United States can end the export ban and simultaneously stabilize the insolvent Highway Trust Fund. Bridges are collapsing and 18-wheelers are falling into potholes the size of Rhode Island, and we complain that Congress has not raised the gasoline tax since 1993. That tree-hugging pit of Marxism, the US Chamber of Commerce, has called for a gas tax increase.
IHS Energy, a consulting group headed by energy writer and wonk Daniel Yergin, released a report earlier this year advocating for an end to the domestic crude oil export ban. The IHS report, downloadable from this IHS page, reports that lifting a crude oil ban would create an average of almost 400,000 jobs between 2016 and 2030.
Surprisingly, and importantly ending the ban would lower gasoline prices by an average of 8 cents per gallon. This is because US gasoline prices are set by global crude oil prices not domestic production costs, and lifting a US export ban would add to the world supply by a significant amount. The only losers would be domestic refiners such as Valero, which has opposed lifting the ban. The Crude Oil Export Ban is a simple transfer payment from American motorists to domestic refiners.
So here is an idea: lift the ban, and at the same time impose a gas tax of 8 cents per gallon. The gasoline consumer is no worse off, because the gas tax only counteracts the lower gas prices resulting from ending the export ban, and generate about $9.7 billion annually for the Highway Trust Fund (135 billion gallons of gasoline were consumed in the United States last year, 13 billion of which were ethanol). Ideally, the crude oil export ban should be accompanied by an $9 per ton of CO2 carbon tax, but that's another story.
Enacted as part of the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, the crude oil export ban was meant to secure energy supplies in the wake of the 1973 oil embargo that shocked an energy-complacent United States. The actual legislation just provides that "[t]he President may, by rule, under such terms and Export conditions as he determines to be appropriate and necessary to carry out the purposes of this Act, restrict exports of -- ... coal, petroleum products, natural gas, or petrochemical feedstocks. .." Section 103 goes on to provide that the "President shall exercise the authority provided for in Exemption, subsection (a) to promulgate a rule prohibiting the export of crude oil and natural gas produced in the United States, except that the President may, ... exempt from such prohibition such crude oil or natural gas exports which he determines to be consistent with the national interest..." So it is pretty clear that the ban is a matter of executive discretion. It is just that Presidents Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush, Clinton, Bush, and Obama have all decided that exporting oil was not in the national interest.
But that was 1975, and the United States is now one of the major oil producers of the world today. Much of the EPCA's provisions, aimed at insulating the United States from volatile global energy prices, still seem useful today, like the Strategic Oil Reserve and fuel efficiency standards for motor vehicles. But lifting the crude oil ban now has bipartisan interest.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=2756303&forum_id=2#26953867) |
|
|