A report recently released shows that children in the U.S. are doing worse economically in recent years with the number of children in poverty rising. [link]
Also, the senate will be voting to repeal the estate tax today.
Sometimes I think I'm not cynical enough.
Also, the senate will be voting to repeal the estate tax today.
Ugh.
You know, the Republicans have tried to sell this by talking about all the family farms that have had to be sold to pay the estate tax after the owner dies. They spent about three months looking for actual cases of this happening. Know how many they found? None. But that didn't stop them from making TV commercials showing this happening to a fictitious family.
Who is terribly pleased that the risers that actually fit under the bed legs finally came.
Oh yay! Lucy crawled under my bed this morning and I was thinking of you. (My bed has about a foot of clearance, so not such a thing.)
Honestly, I think the estate tax is wrong. I don't care if the rich are the beneficiaries of eliminating, either. People pay tax on their income. They often pay tax on purchases. They often also pay tax on their real estate. I think estate tax is overkill. That estate has already been taxed in the building up of it.
Well, I see your point, but the estate tax only kicks in for the wealty (I think it only applies for a million dollars or more (eta: 1.5 million)). Also the estate tax was created (in the 1890's, IIRC, a time with a huge gap between the rich and the poor) in an attempt to prevent a wealthy "aristocracy" from coming to dominate the American economy.
I think the estate tax should be adjusted, but not repealed. I think it does serve a purpose and provides revenue that isn't an excessive burden.
Unrealized capital gains constitute the bulk of the largest wealth accumulations. These unrealized gains have never been taxed and without the estate tax, they would remain untaxed forever.
Oh, no. God forbid they should be untaxed FOREVER! Why exactly should unrealized gains be taxed at the death of the original holder? You realize this is stock or property that has not been sold yet, and so there is no profit made, right? If someone holds on to it FOREVER without realizing any profit from it, it's perfectly fair for them not to be taxed on it until they do. The original investment was already taxed.
Ironically, the capital gains tax may cause some people to have to pay MORE than they would have under the estate tax. The estate tax is the best way to tax appreciated wealth.
WHAT? This argument means you have to pay BOTH!
Since appreciated wealth is only taxed by an estate tax upon inheritance or by capital gains taxes upon sale, wealth that appreciates and is passed down from generation to generation is NEVER taxed until it is sold.
I can understand the rationale where objects are concerned (art, jewels, etc.), but income from savings and investment (which are also appreciated wealth, aren't they?) are taxed yearly as income, and real estate (in those areas where it is taxed) is reassessed from time time time, to account for appreciation. The Fed'l government may not tax it, but they taxed the income that bought it, and the income that paid the local taxes on it, every year. I just think it's wrong. I think it's double dipping. Essentially, you're penalizing heirs, because their parents sweated and saved, and invested wisely. If the parents had blown it all in Vegas, or kept it under the mattress, there'd be no tax.
Well, I see your point, but the estate tax only kicks in for the wealty (I think it only applies for a million dollars or more (eta: 1.5 million)). Also the estate tax was created (in the 1890's, IIRC, a time with a huge gap between the rich and the poor) in an attempt to prevent a wealthy "aristocracy" from coming to dominate the American economy.
Depending on where you live, the house your parents bought in the 60s for under 20,000 could be worth a half million or more, today--nothing fancy--a typical house. Their wealth didn't appreciate in any way that is meaningful to them, because it would also cost the same to replace the house (that is to say, they couldn't sell a half million dollar house, and buy another ~equal house for 20K, again). Prices rose all around.
This is the house they would have sweated over for 30 or 40 years. Add in a cabin in a vacationy town, and an acre Aunt Lucy left them, all of which they've been paying (local) taxes on for the entire time they've owned it, and these might be people who'd qualify as rich. They probably budgeted, and clipped coupons, and sweated their big bills for all those years. And now we tax it again, before they can hand it over to their kid.
Anyone with enough money to worry about it, is going to get around these taxes anyhow by establishing trusts, and life estates, etc. And it didn't really prevent a wealthy aristocracy from dominating the economy anyhow, did it?
I think the estate tax should be adjusted
There's certainly room to ask whether the trigger for the estate tax is set at the best level. But repeal? I have lots of problems with the idea that certain people should spend their lives on Easy Street because their great...[x whatever]...grandparents did well. I thought the American way was to work hard and get ahead. The idea that you make it because your ancestors were successful in time immemorial smacks too much of a hereditary nobility.