Re: Big Government (2)
Tue Apr 15, 2008 2:16 pm
Responding to a website that JJ referenced in another message, Larry wrote:
"I looked briefly at the ... site. Not sure that it is entirely
credible. For example, it gives the tax on an average income of $48,201
as 19.14% or $9,227. A quick calculation on a standard 1040 shows that
a single person making $48,201 taking minimal deductions would pay no
more than $6,293. Married folks, people taking a mortage interest and
property tax deduction, or folks filing jointly, or with children as
deductions would pay less.
"So a quick calculation tells I am not sure I would trust this site."
JJ:
You are always very distrusting of anything that proves my case.
Actually you do not have to trust this or any other site 100% but you
can arrive at over 50% through common sense.
You have already agreed with my figure of 30.8% for the average
visible taxes. In addition to this the site claims there are the
following hidden taxes:
- Median household income -- $48,201.
- Corporate income tax ($354 billion/109.9 households from the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce ) -- 6.68%.
- Employer's share of Payroll tax (Social Security and Medicare) -- 7.65%.
- Excise and other taxes (from "Whitehouse dot gov") -- 3.24%.
- Inflation (from Federal Reserve ) shrinking household net worth of
$155,100 per year -- 3.2%.
- The cost of compliance with regulations (from "House dot gov" using
their $600 billion total/109.9M households, which also referenced
economists estimates of $810 billion and $1.7 trillion) -- 11.33%.
Total hidden taxes -- 32.10%.
Then if we add 30.8% and 32.1%, we come to a total of 62.9%.
Now the guy's figures here look pretty credible to me but let us say
he is off by a whopping 20%. That would place the hidden taxes at
25.7% or the total tax at 56.5%.
I think my statement was a fairly conservative estimate. Here is what
I said: "If all taxes are taken into consideration the average person
in the United States pays almost 50%."
Maybe I should have said "over 50%."
"All wealth is the product of labor."
-- John Locke
In a subsequent message Larry wrote:
"If ... you ... don't have something really, really
credible to back you then you can create the effect of discrediting
the book itself which is not primarily about taxes.
"If you pick a number that more people can agree
on then your book will benefit more from that than picking the most
sensational number you think you can argue for."
In yet another follow-on message Larry quoted JJ:
"All wealth is the product of labor.'
-- John Locke"
Larry then responded with:
"All labor does not produce wealth, nor produce it equally."
JJ responded to Larry's comments above with:
That is correct, but it does not disagree with Locke's statement.
Actually, I appreciate your observations, especially with material I
plan on publishing.
I will rewrite it in hopes of passing the smell test of skeptics.
Copyright © 2008 by JJ Dewey, All Rights Reserved
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