Showing posts with label capital gains taxes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label capital gains taxes. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2012

A Moment of Silence Please, so we May Mourn the Rich

The Republicans always say, "We don't have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem", even though our population grew by 1/3, from 200 million people to 300 million, in just over the last 40 years.

When any Republican is asked about taxing millionaires and billionaires at the same tax rate as middle-class workers, the Republican's standard memorized response is, "We don't want to raise taxes on ANYBODY in this bad economy, especially on the job creators."

We've all wanted "transparency" in our government, and that last particular Republican talking point is about as clear as any statement could possibly be. The GOP doesn't want to tax the rich for any reason at all, ever. Period. No matter what. Case closed. End of story.

The economy was good before the Bush tax cuts [on capital gains] in 2003, but millionaires didn't really hire too many people back then either. So George W. Bush lowered taxes on the rich, but the millionaires still didn't hire anyone. Just the opposite had happened: 52,000 factories went overseas for cheaper labor and we lost 8 million jobs.

So instead of cutting taxes ten years ago, George W. Bush should have RAISED taxes when the economy was still "good" (according the Republican's reasoning today), but instead they lowered taxes and started two un-funded wars.

And if 2003 would have been a good time to raise taxes (if we had low unemployment and the economy was good), why didn't the Republicans propose raising taxes back then, instead of cutting them? Is there EVER a "good time" for the Republicans to tax all the personal earnings of the rich at the same rate as they tax the middle-class?

Mitt Romney earns millions of dollars every year from "investments" and pays a lower tax rate than most middle-class Americans, but how many jobs has THAT "job creator" been creating every year for the past 10 years since he left Bain Capital -- ever since he's enjoyed the low tax rates from the Bush tax cuts on his capital gains and carried interest?

Mitt Romney hasn't hired anyone, unless you count his "undocumented" and under-paid housekeepers. The Republican's reasoning today is, if we tax Mitt Romney the same as any other middle-class taxpayer, Mitt will be forced to hire less housekeepers, cooks, valets, maids, butlers, chauffeurs, and tax attorneys. Mitt won't afford to be a "job creator" any longer :(

Poor Mitt. Let's LOWER his taxes more, or not charge him ANYTHING on capital gains, just like all the Republicans are now proposing....a 0% tax rate on capital gains (And to "pay for it", we can eliminate congress all together.)

We should tax the top 1% on all their capital gains, dividends, annuities, gifts, trust funds, inheritances, and carried interest (etc.) just as we do with any other ORDINARY INCOME - - the same way the 99% is taxed on all their wages, IRA accounts, 401ks, and union pensions - - just as ALL INCOME should be taxed according to our respective tax bracket (see the chart below).

It's not "double taxation" -- all money is taxed again whenever it is transferred from one entity or person to another. Otherwise, after you got your paycheck, you should never be taxed again on your money, no matter what you buy or what you invest it in. But the GOP always likes to use that same old tired argument when we talk about corporations (details).

The Republicans claim they want to pay down our national debt and fund defense spending, but still the Republicans insist on giving BIG OIL taxpayer's hard-earned dollars for BIG GOVERNMENT subsidies - - yet the Republicans don't think that those things should be "paid for" with taxes, but with cuts to Social Security, Medicare, TANF, food stamps, and unemployment benefits. Is the GOP insane, ignorant, greedy, or all of the aforementioned?

The GOP doesn't want to raise taxes on "anyone", but only wants "you" to take all the cuts, rather than have the top 1% be taxed on their income at the same rate as you - - those special tax rates congress created just for the rich exactly 90 years ago.

Besides taxing the rich the same rate as regular wages, we should also remove the CAP on Social Security taxes for those earning over $110,000 a year in "regular wages". Everyone else pay this tax on 100% of their earnings, so why doesn't the top 1% have to? As it is now, the top 1% pays NEITHER Social Security taxes nor Medicare taxes on ANY of their capital gains income. And capital gains is how the top 1% makes most their money...stocks, bonds, dividends, (etc.), because they're not paid an hourly wage like most of us are.

If someone else earns over $34,500 a year in regular wages, they pay 25% in federal income taxes on anything over that. If they live in a rented apartment, they can't even deduct their work boots. If they own a home, they may get a one-time exemption for a capital gain if they sold the home for more than they paid for it, and lived in it long enough.

Otherwise, the only deduction you get on your taxes are the measly "standard deductions" for you and your children. Almost all other exemptions and deductions are written into the tax code to mostly benefit those in the top 1% (and larger corporations). People like Mitt Romney can pay the 15% tax rate on his capital gains (and carried interest) year after year, rather than the top marginal rate of 35% (see the chart below).

For the past 90 years this tax scam -- this unfair and inequitable means of taxation -- this preferential tax rate for the rich -- has been going on since 1921!

Commit to veto any legislation that extends the Bush tax cuts for the top 1% and sign this White House petition sponsored by Move.On.Org

- - - This is what $1 billion can buy today - - -

A $150 million mansion (The Spelling Manor in Los Angeles)

A $2.4 million sports car (2011 Bugatti Veyron Super Sport)

A $600 million ultra-luxury yacht (The 557-foot Eclipse)

A $60 million private jet (VistaJet RETNA), a little more than a Gulfstream G550

And to help celebrate your good fortune, a $275,000 bottle of rare champagne (Shipwrecked 1907 Heidsieck)

Why would one single human being ever want or need more than $1 billion in personal wealth in their entire lifetime? Just so that someone else could be denied food stamps because we lacked the federal tax revenues? Bill Gates has $59 billion, and Warren Buffett has $39 billion...how about a few more crumbs for the poor?

All these billionaires on the Forbes 400 List could buy one or more of everything listed above (in cash with taxes), and they would still have enough spare change left over for stuff like food, electricity, and healthcare (and no monthly bills to pay)....while we scramble every day just for basic survival.

But the Republicans don't want to raise taxes on the uber-rich at all! They lamely claim it is "punishing success" and "waging class warfare", when most of us already know that it's us that is being punished, and suffering a class war that's been waged on the middle-class by the Republicans for the past 40 years!

Last year 50% of all American workers earned less than $27,000 a year when the poverty line for a family of four was $22,314 -- but the Republicans think these people should "put more skin in the game"!

Loopholes such as carried interest and capital gains are taxed at 15%. Trust funds, SWAG investments (silver, wine, art, and gold), gifts and generation-skipping estates, annuities, interest (etc.) all get favorable tax rates for the very wealthy. They are taxed LESS than the wages you labor for, yet the top 1% is also more prone to evade income taxes too! Read my post: How the 1% bilks the 99% and tell me how much the rich are being punished.

But just for the sake of argument, let's assume the Republicans are correct. The next time you see a billionaire (if you can get close enough to one at McDonalds or Wal-Mart), please express your deep concern for them. Take a moment of your time and pause, bow your head in silence, shed a tear of grief, and then apologize to them for being so damn selfish (but whatever you do, don't make eye contact with them).

Then promise them, because they are so successful, they will never have to pay their fair share of income taxes ever again.

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Thursday, January 26, 2012

Pictorial - What the 99% Pays in Federal Taxes

Federal income tax tables from the IRS are very boring and sometimes confusing for many people, so I created a simple pictorial that explains them much more easily by using some sample occupations and their approximately related income tax brackets.

Occupation

Tax Rate

10% - The unemployed who receive jobless benefits are required to pay federal income taxes. Food stamps are not taxed, but these people are castigated by the Republicans for needing them.

15% - Low paying jobs, usually only part-time hours with no benefits. Many people work two or more of these jobs just to make ends meet. They are sometimes called the "under" employed.

25% - Middle class jobs, usually full-time with some type of benefits, such as healthcare insurance and/or retirement plans. Inludes many small businesses owners and Warren Buffett's secretary.

30% - Established small business owners and members of congress if they don't have any other financial interests. Congress receives "gold plated" benefits and makes America's unemployed get drug-tested.

35% - The top marginal income tax bracket. Mid-size to large business owners, lawyers, federal judges, and doctors. Sometimes referred to as the "upper middle-class". Includes base salaries for CEOs (see bonuses below).

15% - The top 1% - CEOs such as Mitt Romney and Warren Buffett, bankers, celebrities, (etc) earning capital gains, bonuses, stock-options*, dividends, annuities, trust funds, carried interest, art, gold, jewelry (etc) See the Forbes Fortune 400

* What large corporate CEOs pay themselves from revenues generated through corporate income. This includes oil tycoons, big defense contractors, big bankers, hedge-fund managers, private equality managers, investment bankers like Goldman Sachs, automotive executives, and all the other robber barons in the top 1%. The 99% has been getting ripped off since 1921 with these preferential tax rates for the uber-wealthy.

Click photo below for a poster version of this page.


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Friday, January 20, 2012

Mitt Romney, the Forbes Fortune 400, and Taxes

Mitt Romney doesn't even come close to a ranking on the 2011 Forbes Fortune 400 list, but with an estimated net worth of over $250 million, Mitt easily belongs in the top 1%.

Bill Gates, with a net worth of $59 billion is ranked at #1. While Roger Wang, with a net worth of $1.3 billion, ranks at the very bottom of the list.

But they all benefit from "capital gains" and pay a lower tax rate than you.

First of all, very quickly, for those of you who aren't familiar with the concept of "capital gains" and capital gains taxes. Simply put, it's this: Anything that one acquires (buys, is given, is loaned, receives as compensation in lieu of a wage for "performance", or receives via a trade) at a certain value, and then is later sold for a higher value (as for profit) for personal financial gain, it is a capital gain.

This could be a house, an antique car, a SWAG investment (silver, wine, art, and gold), or one of many different financial instruments, such as stocks in a company (or the infamous derivatives that were sold by AIG and Goldman Sachs that collapsed our housing market).

But it's primarily stocks....billions and billions of dollars of stocks are traded every day on the world's stock exchanges. Investment bankers such as Goldman Sachs and hedge-fund mangers trade stocks for profits. Your 401ks, IRA accounts, and pensions are usually heavily invested in stocks -- although YOUR funds are taxed as regular income when you retire and draw on those funds -- or you can be penalized 10% for early withdrawal.

CEOs also benefit from stocks in the form of stock-options, usually issued to them at "strike price" (below par value), and after one year can cash them out and only pay 15% to the IRS as a capital gains tax. There are many other ways they benefit from stocks (etc), but to explain them here would only complicate the issue for the sake of this post.

Many wealthy people such as Warren Buffett benefit greatly from capital gains, and have publicly admitted to this (and paying a lower tax rate than his secretary); while those such as Bill Gates has been conspicuously silent on the topic. And some are also dispelling the myth about these "job creators" entirely.

But only lately have most people been focused on Mitt Romney for his 15% tax rate, because he's been running for president; but it's every single person on the Forbes Fortune 400 list (and most of the top 1% like Mitt Romney) that has been enjoying these historically low tax rates since the Bush tax cuts (and even for many years before that).

Before George W. Bush (under Bill Clinton) "capital gains" were still only taxed at a very low rate of only 20% (How do you think the rich got to be, sooooooo rich? Just by hard work and taking risks?)

But unless the 1% were also involved in illegal tax evasion (which many are, much more so than the 99%), then the top 1% has been most likely obeying the law -- because they're not "morally" obligated to pay any more than is required by law. And if only a handful of these very wealthy individuals chipped in to voluntarily contribute more, it would be much too little to make any real difference to the overall deficit. (But the idiots at Fox News keep using this lame and ludicrous argument.)

But if you taxed everyone on the Forbes Fortune 400 list (and those like Mitt Romney) on their capital gains (and carried interest, dividends, estates, annuities, trust funds, earned interest, gift taxes, etc,) at the same exact tax rate as someone earning only $36,000 a year as earned income (25%), over a very short period time that would bring in plenty of tax revenue to the U.S. Treasury.

Or better yet, if we taxed these same people at the top marginal rate of 35% as "ordinary personal income" instead of the much lower 15% rate as capital gains, (because it's still "income"), we'd have a revenue windfall! No more budget cuts and a balanced budget in 10 years! And the nation's money supply would be better circulated within the economy for accelerated job growth - - it would jump start a much healthier and robust economy by creating CONSUMERS.

Right now over $2.3 trillion is being hoarded just by U.S. corporations, and idly sits in off-shore bank accounts, rather than being invested in our economy or work force and paying a "living wage". With just a small portion of these funds as tax revenues, we could have invested in ourselves. (Read my post: Keystone Pipeline: It's WE who should get into the oil business!)

Of course, the GOP and pundits like Bill O'Reilly will claim that people won't invest anymore (or as in Bill's case, quit their jobs) if we raise taxes to the rates we had 10 years ago. This is pure nonsense, based mostly on greed and/or the ideology of not wanting to pay for any social programs such as Social Security....because the top 1% doesn't NEED Social Security!

The Republicans will also argue that "government doesn't create jobs". Oh yeah? The government funded World War II (which included the Manhattan Project). The government funded NASA (which included the lunar landing on the moon). We spend over $650 billion every single year on just "defense". How many jobs does that create? (Or should I have asked, how much corporate profit does that generate as opposed to Social Security?)

When the income tax rates were at their highest level ever in U.S. history, businesses were born, grew, and prospered...and lots of people became rich. (See my post: Tax Rates during the Fabulous Fifties) This was also when the middle-class was born and thrived.

Since 1921, and more recently since the 1950's, it's been the members of congress who have enacted these unfair tax laws for the uber-wealthy (and for themselves), and that's why the American people need new people elected into office -- with a pledge to change the tax code that's been historically tilted for decades to preferentially benefit the uber-rich. (See my post: How the 1% bilks the 99%)

Speaker of the House John Boehner says we don't have a "revenue problem"; but that's always been an outright lie, and that's also why we currently have a deficit problem. Let's go back a little in tax history.

The Tax Revenue Act of 1921 was enacted near the end of the first Gilded Age and was the first Republican tax reduction following their landslide victory in the 1920 federal elections.

The new Republican U.S. Secretary of the Treasury (and banker) Andrew Mellon argued that significant tax reduction was necessary in order to "spur economic expansion and restore prosperity". Does that sound familiar? (See my post: Mellon: The Banker Who Rigged the U.S. Tax Code)

Andrew Mellon obtained a repeal of the wartime excess profits tax, a tax that was previously implemented to fund the U.S. involvement in World War I (just like for all other wars before and since). But George W. Bush did just the opposite, and he imposed no such tax to pay for our wars in Iraq or Afghanistan, but instead, lowered the tax rates even more, mostly to the benefit of the uber-wealthy.

In 1922 the top marginal rate on the wealthiest individuals fell from 73 to 58 percent, and a preferential tax treatment on their capital gains was first introduced at a rate of 12.5 percent (far much less than the previous 73 or 58 percent on the top marginal income earners).

Mellon had hoped for more "significant tax reduction" (Does that also sound familiar?) In 1921 a rate of 10 percent was levied on the net income of corporations, then 12.5 percent thereafter. In 1926 it was raised to 13.5 percent (again, much less than the 73 or 58 percent top marginal rate on the corporate leader's personal income.)

Then 8 years later after those massive tax cuts for the rich in 1921 ("to spur economic expansion"), in 1929 we had the stock market crash and the Great Depression. And 7 years later after Bush's massive tax cuts for the rich ("to spur economic expansion"), in 2008 we had another stock market crash and the Great Recession. Coincidence?

But back to Mitt Romney, Bain Capital, and the Forbes Fortune 400 list.

At the Huffington Post Sam Stein says: "Faced with the need to replenish state coffers, then-Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney chose on multiple occasions to target corporations that lowered their tax liabilities by transferring profits outside of his state. The move helped raise tens of millions of dollars in additional revenue for the State and, on occasion, put Romney at odds with anti-tax advocates, both in Massachusetts and nationwide.

It also appeared to go directly against the business practices being conducted by Bain Capital, the private equity firm Romney started and in which he maintained investments.

According to an ABC News report released Wednesday night, Romney continues to hold roughly $8 million of personal wealth in as many as 12 Cayman Islands-based funds. Bain Capital itself has 138 offshore accounts in the Cayman Islands alone, designed for the firm to benefit financially from the island's lenient tax structure, according to tax experts.

Reuters, meanwhile, reported on Wednesday that Bain Capital funds in which Romney is invested are scattered from Delaware to the Cayman Islands and Bermuda, Ireland and Hong Kong.

And Romney and Co. only pays a 15% tax rate (on carried interest, capital gains, dividends, etc).

Capital gains were once taxed as high as 40% in 1975. Economist Paul Krugman at the New York Times explains that capital gains tax rates were then lowered close to 30 percent from 1986 through 1997. Economist Jared Bernstein says, "I’m more convinced than ever that all this favorable treatment just needlessly loses scads of [tax] revenue and redistributes income upwards" to the top 1%.

Notice the chart below: As CEO pay and profits have continually gone up for the last 40 years, their capital gains tax rate has gone down. But yet, at the same time, our national debt and annual budget has risen drastically in an attempt to accommodate another 100 million more people due to our population growth since the mid-70's.

Most income from the top 1% comes from capital gains, but they have the lowest tax rate of anybody else (unless you're earning less than $8,700 a year, which is taxed at 10%). But Speaker of the House John Boehner keeps repeating, "We don't have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem." Do you still believe him now?

Our middle-class began it's 40-year decline since the mid-70's and our society began seeing a massive upsurge in two-family incomes, necessitated by the ever rising cost of living (when "latch key" kids started becoming more prevalent. In 1967 I was already one).

This was also about the same time (right after the Vietnam War) when CEO pay began skyrocketing, while wages were being kept depressed as union membership was also in decline as "Right to Work" legislation ("union busting") was being pushed by the Republicans on behalf of large corporations (as they still are).

Also around this same time, outsourcing jobs began escalating for cheaper labor overseas, but the Republicans never mention this is their arguments, always blaming "high taxes" (even when they're low) and "regulation" as their excuse for those jobs leaving our shores.

But the real truth is, because of the many loopholes in the U.S. tax code over the last 25 years or so, on average, the largest U.S. multi-national corporations and banks already pay a lower effective tax rate in corporate taxes (14% to 18%) than they would in China (25%). It's not over-regulation or taxes that keeps businesses from hiring, they just don't have to hire right now, because they're using a reduced work force with lower wages and higher productivity to meet reduced consumer demand.

Because the GOP also despises labor unions, they blame them for attempting to negotiate wages that only keeps pace with inflation. The GOP uses this argument that union workers shouldn't be paid more than those in the private sector, when it's become common knowledge that wages in the private sector have remained stagnant or fell over the past 40 years -- just to pay CEOs ever rising and excessive salaries.

That's why Boeing wanted to move jobs from their home state of Washington to South Carolina...for lower wages. Union (or government) workers haven't been getting rich on the taxpayer's backs, the uber-rich like Mitt Romney and the top 1% (such as Boeing's CEO) have been getting rich on the taxpayer's backs - - with an unfair tax code that exempts Boeing from corporate taxes and allows the CEO to pay 15% on capital gains from stock-options...even through Boeing gets government subsidies and defense contracts. The system is rigged from top to bottom. Don't believe me? Ask Joe the Machinist.

And all the huge U.S. multi-national corporate conglomerates and CEOs have been doing this at every turn...ripping us off...thanks to their accomplices in congress. (But they call it "class warfare". Yes it is, against us!)

Now in 2012, even with two jobs per household, it's barely enough to live on when 50% of all American workers earn less than $27,000 a year (the poverty line for a family of four is $22,314). Most of these people were taxed at the same rate (15%) as multi-mega-millionaires like Mitt Romney.



How's that "free enterprise" and "capitalism" working out for average American workers? Not very well if we have 30 million under or unemployed Americans and another 75 million earning near poverty wages. But for the top 1%, they couldn't be happier! It's like the Roaring Twenties all over again for them! They've been partying like it's 1929!

But I digress, let's get back to Mitt Romney, Bain Capital, the Forbes Fortune 400 list, and "capital gains taxes".

There are those such as David Leonhardt at the New York Times that defends Mitt Romney's 15% tax rate, and uses the old tired argument of "double taxation" to skew the real argument of income inequality and an ever increasing disparity in wealth in this country...the widest income gap than in any other industrialized society today -- not seen for 100 years since during the first Gilded Age.

David Leonhardt stated that "economists, with good reason, like to apportion all taxes to people, rather than to an entity like a corporation. If you also include indirect taxes — mainly corporate taxes, effectively paid by stockholders — Mr. Romney’s rate rises higher."

One reader who commented on David Leonhardt's article wrote. "But wait a minute...Romney said corporations are people too. They can't have it both ways!"

Another reader commented, "What?! This is absurd. If corporations are people, they pay their own taxes. On the other hand, if corporations are people, stockholders are slave owners."

And another reader commented, "It is bizarre to assume that all corporate taxes should be assigned to those who hold stocks. Why not determine the effect on the final price of goods or services to consumers? They are paying a form of sales tax if the corporate tax rate is passed through. Perhaps the corporate tax rate is a weird payroll tax that reduces the amount employees are compensated. The corporate taxes might also influence the debt-to-equity ratio for the company, changing the proportion of revenue that goes to owners. Corporate taxes are paid by corporations, and unless you have a good reason to assign them to the stockholders instead of any of the other parties involved in a revenue stream, it shouldn't be mentioned."

He continues, "I should also add that the link provided by the author just vaguely points to the Congressional Budget Office's general information web page, but eventually leads the interested reader to this statement:

"CBO assumes in this analysis that the employer’s share of payroll taxes is passed on to employees in the form of lower wages and that corporate income taxes are borne by owners of capital in proportion to their income from interest, dividends, capital gains, and rents."

In other words, instead of being supported by evidence from the CBO, the author's assertion is merely simplifying an assumption in a government report without empirical basis.

David Leonhardt also claimed in his article that "if you widened the lens beyond direct federal taxes — to all taxes, including indirect, state and local taxes — the conclusion would likely be [that] Mr. Romney does not pay a lower tax rate than most Americans [and] he also doesn’t pay a much higher tax rate, despite being much more affluent."

So I also commented, "No, don't widen the lens...just stick to the facts. Anyone earning between $8,700 and $35,350 a year is in the 15% tax bracket, just like Mitt Romney." (Just like every other single person on the Forbes Fortune 400 list -- the top 1%).

And the lower income people must also pay local and state taxes too. They must also pay Social Security and Medicare taxes on 100% of their earnings, whereas Mitt Romney and the top 1% pays none of these taxes on carried interest or capital gains.

And even if these bankers, CEOs, hedge-fund mangers, and lobbyists (or even members of congress) earned a wage (as in a "base salary"), their Social Security taxes would be capped at their first $110,000 when they might earn a $1 million salary (and/or in conjunction with stock options).

So essentially, poor people actually pay more as a percentage of their incomes, and also because a greater percentage of their income is also spent on actual consumption -- and usually for just the very basics -- such as food, medicine, electricity, and food.

Mitt Romney and everyone on the Forbes Fortune 400 list actually pays a lower tax rate than everybody earning between $35,350 and $85,559 a year -- the entire middle-class -- whose tax rate is higher at 25%. And the middle-class also spends a greater percentage of their income on actual consumption.



The top 1% also enjoys many other tax shelters that we don't have (or can access, or can afford to benefit from), such as expensive art and wine collections (See my post about SWAG investments).

It's odd that the richest people in this country complain the most about taxes, when they pay so much less as a percentage of their income, and have so much more than everybody else. I'm tired of hearing people like Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity whining like a stuck pigs. Those people never have to fear sleeping on a sidewalk in the cold rain or ever fear going hungry. But people like they and Mitt Romney wants us to believe that Mitt once worried about getting a pink slip.

And in closing, that writer of the New York Times article (David Leonhardt) should be writing for the Wall Street Journal instead. Maybe it is I who should be writing for the New York Times.

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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Mitt Romney: Mister 15% and Platinum Parachutes

President Obama hasn't been killing jobs, but Mitt Romney has. And Obama has tried to help those who lost their jobs because of CEOs like Mitt Romney. Leaders such as Obama saves lives, CEOs like Mitt Romney destroys them for profits.

One way the CEOs do this is by using millions of dollars in stock-based compensation payouts for "performance" to motivate management to run their companies -- just like Romney did at Bain Capital. They pay themselves to do their jobs, to maximize profits; and they often pay themselves with "platinum parachutes" when they leave.

And because of the Bush tax cuts, these same CEOs also pay a lower tax rate on these "stock options" from the income they earn off dividends, carried interest, and capital gains (15%)...a lower tax rate than for someone else who's only earning $35,000 a year in payroll wages (25%).

(* I noticed that the tax brackets I saw displayed on Fox News and CNN yesterday were very misleading, and made me realize whose side they're on regarding the current tax law...skewing the figures to play down Mitt's tax rate, to make it look more acceptable to the uniformed, such as substituting "median income" for "household income", and using completely false numbers for the tax brackets and rates.)

Also these CEOs don't have to pay any Medicare or Social Security taxes on these stock options either (FICA); although if they earned a "base salary", of say $1 million in regular wages, their Social Security taxes are capped at the first $110,000 they earn, so they only pay this tax on a fraction of their income. But most of us who earn less than $110,000 have to pay Social Security taxes on 100% of our total earnings.

And according to Josh Harkinson at Mother Jones, for many CEOs, bankers, hedge-fund managers, and corporate raiders like Mitt Romney, the easiest way to get rich is just to quit their jobs.

Increasingly, corporations offer their chief executives fantastically generous severance packages—retirement bonuses, extended stock options, and pensions that can add up to $100 million or more. Rather than "golden parachutes", we could call them platinum parachutes.

These deals are supposed to benefit shareholders by encouraging CEOs to take a long-term view of corporate profits, but some compensation experts have their doubts.

"Too many golden parachutes and too many retirement packages are of a size that clearly seems only in the interest of the departing executive," says a new report by GMI, a corporate governance consultancy.

By way of example, the report singles out 21 CEOs (listed below) whose severance packages are worth more than the median U.S. earner would make in 49 lifetimes. In the case of GE's John Welch Jr., the figure would be 203 lifetimes. But you could still argue that the most outrageous example is Viacom's Thomas Freston, who put in just one year of work for his $100-million-plus sendoff.

Click chart to enlarge

Roger Martin, author of Fixing the Game, wrote an article for the Huffington Post (Earning a Real Return on Real Investment) detailing one example of executive compensation...and how stock values are driven by "performance pay".

Boards, executives and compensation consultants hold an almost fanatical attachment to the expectations market because they believe that the job of management should be to maximize the long-term value of the firm and the current stock price is considered the best proxy for that long-term value. Hence, boards and executives assume that if they increase the stock price of the firm today, they have contributed to the maximization of long-term value. That thinking has led to the tying of compensation to stock price through grants of stock options and restricted stock, which in turn has led to the shift in focus of executives away from building real companies and toward the manipulation of investor expectations.

Critics of eliminating the focus on stock price and stock-based compensation fear that doing so would leave companies without 'an objective function' -- something to guide their performance toward creating the value they are supposed to generate. They argue that focusing on measuring value on the basis of stock price and providing incentives that are stock-based may not be a perfect system, but it is the only one that can guide proper company behavior. And they argue that investors deserve a return on their investment in the company so it is the role of management to work assiduously at maximizing the stock price.

These arguments play fast and loose with logic. Let's say I start a company and take it public at $20/share. Ben, who helps me post these columns, buys a share for $20/share is part of the IPO. Let's imagine that Ben needs to earn 10% on his investment to account for its riskiness -- so I have to produce $2/share of net earnings for him, which would enable me to dividend it out to him and enable him to earn his targeted 10%. However, let's imagine that there is a LinkedIn-like frenzy after the IPO, the stock skyrockets to $100/share, and Arianna buys the share from Ben for $100. The prevailing theory says that I owe Arianna (who has the same desired return for her risk) $10/share of return.

But do I? Did Arianna give me $100 like Ben gave me $20? Did Ben turn around and return his $80 profit to the firm? No. Arianna gave an $80 profit to Ben who pocketed it. Did I promote or authorize or even know of the sale by Ben to Arianna? No. They decided on that transaction themselves -- my firm was not a party to it and the capital I have for investment is still $20.

So to satisfy Arianna's return requirement, I need to make $10/share based on an investment of $20 or 50% return on investment -- a very hard thing to do. All because she decided it was worth it to buy the share from Ben for $100.

She didn't give me a single dollar of investment capital -- and I don't owe her anything more than a return on the $20, which is the total capital I have ever received for the share that she now owns. That should be the only obligation to shareholders that companies ever accept: to earn them a return above their cost of capital for the capital actually provided by shareholders (plus any earnings on those shares retained by the company rather than paid out in a dividend) -- i.e., the book value of the shares. If shareholders want to trade those shares between themselves based on their expectations of the future, they should knock themselves out and do it. But those trades and the value they are made at should have no bearing on the obligations of executive management.

But because this is not the case and executives routinely accept the obligation to earn a return on the market price of the shares rather than the book value of the shares -- and have their incentives tied to the former, they engage in extremely risky actions when their share price rises. Michael Jensen wrote a very good article on the subject entitled "The Agency Costs of Overvalued Equity and the Current State of Corporate Finance", which argues that spectacular crashes including Enron, WorldCom and Nortel could be traced to this problem. Management feels the obligation to earn a spectacularly high return on the investment resources they were actually given in order to earn a minimally acceptable return on value based on the expectations of investors. That article was written in 2004, well before the 2008 crash, but the actions of the big American banks bore a great similarity. The stock price of Citibank went up by 15X during the 1990s and headed another 50% higher in the time before the crash. What did Chuck Prince think he needed to do when he took over as CEO in 2003? I suspect that it was to earn an acceptable return on the wildly inflated stock price of Citibank -- however risky that was to accomplish. And it was riskier than anyone could have imagined for Prince and the other "too big to fail banks".

At the very heart of the problem are two deeply flawed theories -- first, that the obligation of management is to earn a return on the expectations of shareholders, however insanely high those expectations happen to be: and second, that stock-based compensation provides a useful motivation for management to take care of their company. They both sound good on the surface, but shareholders would be better off in the long-run if management felt the obligation to earn a fair, risk-adjusted return on the investment capital they were given and if their performance incentives were based on their company's performance in the real game.

Moderator: To an "efficiency expert" such as Mitt Romney, if they work for "performance" bonuses, you're all expendable. No job is safe, not even yours.

If CEOs are "incentivized" to use automation, lay off workers, and outsource jobs just to increase the value of their own stock-options for "performance" (and also benefit from paying a lesser tax rate, paying less for capital gains then they might for corporate taxes), it only encourages more CEOs to do more of the same - - without any regard to the long-term value of a company, but only for shareholders (and their own) short-term and low-taxed gains.

Meanwhile, by cutting their costs for labor, these CEOs (like Mitt Romney) are also reducing consumer demand by creating a smaller work force -- and/or by cutting wages -- and thereby lowering the living standard for average working American families....essentially, eliminating our middle-class.

And then finally, we also end up with a much reduced revenue stream from any potentially collected income taxes, the revenue that's necessary to fund our government. That's what ALL the Republicans mean by lower taxes and less government...lower taxes for the rich (the 1%) but less benefits for us (the 99%).

Mitt Romney just announced yesterday that he will release his tax return in April, but only for the year 2011. If so, we might not ever be privy to all his other previous tax shelters. Republican New Jersey Governor Chris Christie said, "It's probably much ado about nothing." Oh really?

Mitt Romney and Bain Capital's investment in Staples was considered "venture capitalism"; but their "leveraged buy-outs" in companies such as Ampad is better known as "vulture capitalism", which is perpetrated by corporate raiders strictly for fast and easy short-term profits for investors, and doesn't create jobs or long-term growth. Mitt wasn't a "job creator". It's all in the book: The Real Romney

It's just like a narrator recently said of Mitt Romney on the Stephen Colbert Report: "As head of Bain Capital he bought companies, carved them up, and got rid of what he couldn’t use. If Mitt Romney really believes corporations are people my friend, then Mitt Romney is a serial killer. He’s Mitt the Ripper.”

Mitt Romney practically re-invented the practice that created our current "income inequality", just look at his history at Bain Capital. And now he (and other GOP corporate shills) are running for the job as president to be our "job creators". Don't you find this totally absurd?

Robert Reich recently wrote, "Mitt Romney is casting the 2012 campaign as free enterprise on trial by defining 'free enterprise' as achieving success through hard work and risk. Wait a minute, who do they think is bearing the risks?"

Martin Luther King, Jr. once said, "We have socialism for the rich, and rugged free-market capitalism for the poor."

While everything these CEOs have been doing for the past 30 years is perfectly legal, most of us are beginning to wonder if it's morally ethical. The leaders of the corporate and financial world have greatly benefited from our "free enterprise" economic system of government, but now we're all starting to question why we have been paying so much more for our freedom.

Virgil Bierschwale of Keep America at Work writes, "If free enterprise is on trial, I will cast my vote as one of the 300 million jurors that is determining its verdict." He would find them all GUILTY, and would say in his best Clint Eastwood style, "Hang 'em high!"

If Mitt Romney ever becomes president, expect more of the same: expect a far wider disparity between rich and poor, expect less regulation of the banking industry, expect more tax breaks for the rich, and expect more corporate influence in our politics...just like you would if you voted for any of the Republican candidates.

But Mitt Romney is the poster child for the top 1%, and represents everything that has been squeezing and eliminating our middle-class for the past 30 years. Unlike the folks like Mitt Romney, we'll never get a platinum parachute...all we could expect are more pink slips and eviction notices.

It's a shame that so many Republican voters (like those in South Carolina) would rather vote against their own best interests (for someone such as Mitt Romney) rather than for someone more like President Obama (who knows what it's like to go without), simply because he's black.

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PHOTO: The ticker tape that the top 1% used to make all their hard-earned money with back in the old days...when capital gains and stock-options used to be taxed as "regular income". This was before 1921, during the first Gilded Age.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

As the Population Doubled, Tax Rates have Declined

Since the Bush Tax cuts and two wars, and then later with the economic collapse in 2008, we've had mass unemployment and lower property values. So it's no wonder we now have a budget crisis and a revenue problem, but not necessarily a "spending problem".

Today we have some of the lowest tax rates in U.S. history, yet the Republicans and Tea Party have kept falsely claiming otherwise, saying we are over-taxed...when just the opposite is true. (Historical Tax Rates on the Rich from 1862 to 2011)

More people (with a natural population growth) makes for "bigger government", and why a fair balance of taxation and necessary domestic spending is needed to maintain programs like Social Security and Medicare, while maintaining what's necessary for the defense of the country. But it's in the defense industry where we have the most fraud, corruption and waste.

However, while government (people) continues to grow, corporate tax rates, the capital gains tax rates, and the top income tax rates have been steadily in decline for decades.

But rather than raise the tax rates, or cut anything in defense spending, the Republicans want to cut and privatize programs that we paid all our lives into, such as Social Security and Medicare.

If we just taxed people on their annuities, trust funds, gifts, dividends, estates (generation-skipping), and capital gains on stock trades as REGULAR INCOME according their top marginal federal income tax brackets, wouldn't that be fair? (How the 1% bilks the 99%)

Because of the many loopholes in the U.S. tax code, on average, the largest U.S. multi-national corporations and banks already pay a lower effective tax rate in corporate taxes (14% to 18%) than they would in China (25%). It's not over-regulation or taxes that keeps businesses from hiring, they just don't have to.

And shouldn't we tax Kim Kardashian and Paris Hilton their fair share? (Gift Taxes on the Fabulously Rich)

In 1950 we had a population of 152,271,417 with a top corporate tax rate rising to 52%. The top marginal rate for income was 91% and capital gains was taxed at 25%. (Tax rates during the Fabulous Fifties)



In 1977 capital gains on stocks (etc) was taxed at 49% (Historical Tax Rates on the Rich from 1862 to 2011), now it's only 15%.

Today in 2011 we have a population of 312,827,260 (double from 60 years ago). Corporations are paying an average "effective" tax rate of less than half they than did in 1950. (Low Wages Kills Jobs, Not High Taxes).

Historical Corporate Tax Rates:
From 1969
(the highest) to the Present (near lowest)
Year/s Tax Rate
1969 52.8%
1970 49.2%
1971 - 1978 48%
1979 - 1986 46%
1987 40%
1988 - 1992 34%
1993 - 2011 35%

Currently the top marginal rate for "regular" income is 35% (before deductions) and capital gains is taxed historically low at 15% (Capital gains is where the top 1% earns most of their income).

The GOP and Tea Party wants "smaller government". Do they mean they want less people?

Year U.S. Population (Size of government)

Tax Rates

(Not including estate and gift tax rates)

1913 97,225,000 The Revenue Act of 1913 - The Tariff Act imposed the federal income tax following the ratification of the Sixteenth Amendment. Less than 1% of the population paid federal income tax at the time. From 1913 to 1921 capital gains were taxed as ordinary income until 1922.
1922 110,049,000 The top marginal rate on individuals fell from 73 to 58% by 1922, but preferential treatment for capital gains was introduced at a rate of 12.5 percent (and was never this low again until the Bust tax cuts in 2003).
1950 152,271,417 The Revenue Act of 1950 increased the top corporate rate to 45%. The Korean War induced Congress to re-impose an excess profits tax, effective from July 1950 to December 1953. The tax rate was 30% of excess profits with the top corporate tax rate rising to 47%, then later to 52%. Top marginal was 91% and capital gains was 25%
1964 191,888,791 The Revenue Act of 1964 - Reduced top marginal rate from 91% to 70%, reduced corporate tax rate from 52% to 48%.
1978 222,584,545 The Revenue Act of 1978 reduced individual income taxes, reducing corporate tax rates (the top rate falling from 48% to 46%), effectively reducing the rate of taxation on realized capital gains to 28%.

1986

240,132,887

The Tax Reform Act of 1986 - The top tax rate was lowered from 50% to 28% while the bottom rate was raised from 11% to 15%. Capital gains rates were 28%.
1997 267,743,595 The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 - The top capital gains rate fell from 28% to 20%.
2011 312,827, 260 George W. Bush tax cuts since 2001 and 2003 - The top corporate and top marginal tax rate is now 35%. Capital gains is only a mere15%.

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Monday, December 19, 2011

Tax Cuts Does Nothing for the Unemployed

It's being reported by the White House that without congressional approval, the Social Security payroll tax cut for 160 million workers would rise from 4.2% to 6.2% on January 1st. For one thing, it's 150 million, not 160 million.

The median individual income for Americans is $26,364 before taxes (75.2 million having income above that amount, and the other half (the bottom 50%) have income below that amount -- for a total of 150.4 million working Americans -- as reported by employers on W-2 forms in 2010. Source: Social Security Administration.

24.1 million (16 %) reported less than $5,000. I can't imagine living on this so for the sake of argument, I'll assume most are a teen or a spouse working a part-time job for supplemental income.

The majority of the work force (112.8 million, or 75%) reported $50,000 or less before taxes. At 4.2 percent on $50,000, one would pay $2,100 for Social Security taxes. If it goes back up to 6.2%, they would pay $3,100 -- a difference of $1,000 more (or $52 a week). The White House exaggerated this amount and reported: "For a typical family earning $50,000 a year, this cut would translate to an extra $1500 a year in their pockets."

But at the very most, the bottom 50% (those earning $26,364 or less a year) would only see their taxes go up $527 a year (or $10 a week). Yes, I know. When you're living at, or near poverty level, ten bucks is a lot of money. But the Republicans say these people should count themselves lucky because most of them have refrigerators and TVs. Comedian Jon Stewart addresses this in a very hilarious (and sarcastic) manner.

A new census record shows 1 in 2 people in America are now poor or low income. Just 7 percent of those who lost jobs after the financial crisis of 2008 have returned to or exceeded their previous financial position. This may be because in the past 10 years alone we've lost 56,000 factories and 8.2 million jobs (and they'll never be back).

But regarding the payroll tax: it is businesses who will benefit the most from the proposed extension of the payroll tax cut. Approximately 98 percent of businesses will see their payroll tax bill cut in half -- from 6.2% to 3.1% -- on their first $5 million in wages.

Workers benefit less, and the unemployed doesn't benefit at all.

Last year 81 Americans reported incomes of over $50 million, but they would only save $2,180 a year with their "payroll tax cut" because Social Security taxes for the wealthy are capped at $106,000. So either way, the wealthy benefit the most.

Annual incomes

Number of people
People with annual incomes of over $1 million derived from wages reported on a W-2 form. Not counting those who only derive an income from capital gains in investments. Read this article: Rich Man Dispels Myth about Job Creators
$1 million — 1,499,999.99 47,058
$1.5 million — 1,999,999.99 17,624
$2 million — 2,499,999.99 8,767
$2.5 million — 2,999,999.99 5,094
$3 million — 3,499,999.99 3,276
$3.5 million — 3,999,999.99 2,296
$4 million — 4,499,999.99 1,685
$4.5 million — 4,999,999.99 1,221
$5 million — 9,999,999.99 4,607
$10 million — 19,999,999.99 1,537
$20 million — 49,999,999.99 479

$50 million + (Forbes 400 List)

81

Total Americans with annual wages above $1 million reported on W-2 forms - such as CEOs, lobbyists, bankers, hedge fund mangers, etc with "base" salaries (stock options are separate and called capital gains).


93,725 Total

While I can see that not raising taxes 2% on working people in a bad economy is a good thing, I don't see it as an national emergency. After all, they do have jobs. What should be even more emphasized is extending the funding for those who are still eligible to receive unemployment benefits. After all, they would have ZERO income, and wouldn't benefit from any tax cut at all.

7.4 million Americans are currently receiving either regular state or federal extended unemployment benefits (chart below*), and are also subject to federal income taxes (but not Social Security taxes). A total of 18 million Americans at one time received federal extended benefits (EUC).

But approximately 10 million have already exhausted all state and federal benefits -- and about 8.4 million of them are no longer counted in the unemployment rate (because after a certain time, the Bureau of Labor Statistics automatically labels them as "discouraged workers" and says they "dropped out of the work force").

But nobody is talking about "these people" any more. Once their unemployment benefits expire, they are forgotten and swept under the rug.

And 27 million unemployed Americans will not benefit at all from any amount of a Social Security tax cut, although about 75 million working Americans could use the extra $10 in their pocket.

Also: I read through the GOP's "jobs plan", and it's a joke. It accelerates a decision on the Keystone XL energy pipeline within 60 days. The proposed Keystone XL tar sands pipeline would carry oil from the Canadian tar sands across our country to ports and refineries along the Texas Gulf coast. From there it could be exported anywhere in the world. (Read how investment banks like Goldman Sachs manipulates the commodities markets for oil, etc. by speculation and raising prices.)

The Keystone XL project would provide, at most, 6,000 temporary construction jobs, very few of which would be local hires, according to an analysis performed by the U.S. State Department.

Cornell University's Global Labor Institute did its own evaluation, concluding that the project would employ between 2,500 and 4,650 construction workers. "Most jobs created will be temporary and non-local," the institute concluded in its report, appropriately titled, "Pipe Dreams?"

Even TransCanada, the Canadian pipeline company that wants to build the pipeline, has said it would only create "hundreds of permanent jobs. That's what TransCanada's vice president for pipelines, Robert Jones, told CNN a few weeks ago.

As far as cutting taxes for corporations (whether s single person incorporates themselves or the mammoth multi-national conglomerate called Wal-Mart) should be taxed at an effective tax rate of 25% like in China (no tax loopholes), because they enjoy "limited liability". Their tax rate would have to be ZERO (like many American corporations enjoy today) to many create jobs, but they still wouldn't create enough jobs because labor is so much cheaper overseas.

And smaller unincorporated businesses (private entrepreneurships who actually hire people) should be taxed much lower. That could really help create jobs. Read: Low Wages Kills Jobs, Not High Taxes

But either way, Social Security tax cuts does absolutely nothing to help the unemployed.


* PERSONS CLAIMING UI BENEFITS IN ALL PROGRAMS

WEEK ENDING

Nov. 26, 2011

Regular State

3,685,651

Federal Employees (UCFE)

30,893

Newly Discharged Veterans (UCX)

44,325

EUC 2008 (Federal Extended Benefits)

3,048,926

Extended Benefits (SEB)

593,097

State Additional Benefits

4,727

STC / Workshare

41,888

TOTAL 7,449,507

Year-to-date was 9,192,067 - a difference of 1,742,560

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