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Taxes You are paying better than Three Quarters of your gross income to some government entity or other in the form of Taxes:
Overt Taxes:
• Fed income tax
• Fed FICA tax
• Fed SECA tax
• Fed Worker’s Comp
• State Worker’s Comp
• Fed Medicare
• State Income tax
• City Income tax
• Some Counties have an income tax
• Sales taxes
• Luxury taxes
• Road Tolls
• Real Estate taxes
• Vehicle taxes
• …………Surcharges
• …………License fees
• …………Registration fees
• …………Gasoline consumption taxes
Hidden Taxes
(Taxation that is structural – built into the cost of what you pay for things so you don’t see it as “tax” on your receipt but rather, higher prices):
• Real estate taxes on renters: Renters pay their landlord’s Real Estate taxes via higher rent.
• VAT taxation VIA higher retail prices for foods clothing and other goods made in or shipped through Europe.
• Sales and use taxes paid as higher prices for consumer goods that are made in any nation with taxes.
• Highway taxes VIA higher costs for consumer goods that are shipped across any road or rail whether in the US or any foreign
• Waterway use taxes for consumer goods chipped along any US or foreign water way.
• Unemployment taxes passed on to you VIA lower wages.
• Employer provided life insurance taxes you pay in lower wages
• Subsidy taxes for any thing you buy that benefits from a subsidy
• U.S. waterway taxes you pay to go anywhere by boat.
• Medical risk Taxes like the DPD tax
• Taxes on College Scholarships
• Taxes on debt forgiveness when you “cut a deal” with your creditor for anything less than the entire amount with interest.
• Gasoline tax. ( 19 - 45.8 cents {state depending}per gallon in federal, state and local taxes)
• Travel taxes: Airfare, hotels, car rental and taxi service: 7.5% air fare & $3.50 tax for each increment of the flight and $2.50 in security tax on each increment of that flight. Hotel & car rentals are taxed up to 40% of the cost.
• Sin taxes on beer, liquor, gambling and cigarettes. ($13.50-a-gallon tax on hard liquor and the 33-cent tax on a six-pack.)
• State taxes on insurance premiums. A $9-Billion wind fall for each state each year. You state taxes your insurance company which passes that on to you.
• Excise tax. All impoirts have a federal excise tax levied onto them.
The below is a very, very, short list of imports and their respective taxes which you pay.
• Bicycles 11%
• Brussel sprouts 12%
• Cotton hammocks 15%
• Infant formulas 18%
• Flashlights 18%
• Peanut butter 143%
• Girdles and panty girdles 24%
• Brooms 32%
• Plastic school supplies
The list goes on and on.
There are hundreds of taxes you pay. The cumulative effect is a tax of no less than 75% on your gross income.
You can be sure that if there is a transaction where you transfer any of the money you earn to some one for something you are paying a tax.
The result is that you pay on average about 75% of your gross income to government in the form of taxes.
This link takes you to a comprehensive study of the taxes you pay it is an excellent resource: www.ipi.org/ipi%5CIPIPub...Tax-FINAL.pdf
www.irs.gov/irs/article/...01099,00.html
Google these names:
Nina Olson
Jared Bernstein
Pete Sepp,
Institute for Policy Innovation, Washington, D.C.
Overt Taxes:
• Fed income tax
• Fed FICA tax
• Fed SECA tax
• Fed Worker’s Comp
• State Worker’s Comp
• Fed Medicare
• State Income tax
• City Income tax
• Some Counties have an income tax
• Sales taxes
• Luxury taxes
• Road Tolls
• Real Estate taxes
• Vehicle taxes
• …………Surcharges
• …………License fees
• …………Registration fees
• …………Gasoline consumption taxes
Hidden Taxes
(Taxation that is structural – built into the cost of what you pay for things so you don’t see it as “tax” on your receipt but rather, higher prices):
• Real estate taxes on renters: Renters pay their landlord’s Real Estate taxes via higher rent.
• VAT taxation VIA higher retail prices for foods clothing and other goods made in or shipped through Europe.
• Sales and use taxes paid as higher prices for consumer goods that are made in any nation with taxes.
• Highway taxes VIA higher costs for consumer goods that are shipped across any road or rail whether in the US or any foreign
• Waterway use taxes for consumer goods chipped along any US or foreign water way.
• Unemployment taxes passed on to you VIA lower wages.
• Employer provided life insurance taxes you pay in lower wages
• Subsidy taxes for any thing you buy that benefits from a subsidy
• U.S. waterway taxes you pay to go anywhere by boat.
• Medical risk Taxes like the DPD tax
• Taxes on College Scholarships
• Taxes on debt forgiveness when you “cut a deal” with your creditor for anything less than the entire amount with interest.
• Gasoline tax. ( 19 - 45.8 cents {state depending}per gallon in federal, state and local taxes)
• Travel taxes: Airfare, hotels, car rental and taxi service: 7.5% air fare & $3.50 tax for each increment of the flight and $2.50 in security tax on each increment of that flight. Hotel & car rentals are taxed up to 40% of the cost.
• Sin taxes on beer, liquor, gambling and cigarettes. ($13.50-a-gallon tax on hard liquor and the 33-cent tax on a six-pack.)
• State taxes on insurance premiums. A $9-Billion wind fall for each state each year. You state taxes your insurance company which passes that on to you.
• Excise tax. All impoirts have a federal excise tax levied onto them.
The below is a very, very, short list of imports and their respective taxes which you pay.
• Bicycles 11%
• Brussel sprouts 12%
• Cotton hammocks 15%
• Infant formulas 18%
• Flashlights 18%
• Peanut butter 143%
• Girdles and panty girdles 24%
• Brooms 32%
• Plastic school supplies
The list goes on and on.
There are hundreds of taxes you pay. The cumulative effect is a tax of no less than 75% on your gross income.
You can be sure that if there is a transaction where you transfer any of the money you earn to some one for something you are paying a tax.
The result is that you pay on average about 75% of your gross income to government in the form of taxes.
This link takes you to a comprehensive study of the taxes you pay it is an excellent resource: www.ipi.org/ipi%5CIPIPub...Tax-FINAL.pdf
www.irs.gov/irs/article/...01099,00.html
Google these names:
Nina Olson
Jared Bernstein
Pete Sepp,
Institute for Policy Innovation, Washington, D.C.
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Re: Tax in the US is at 75% right now
Thu, November 19, 2009 - 8:11 AMOverall Tax Burden and Government Spending
Jack Anderson 05.22.06, 12:00 AM ET
New York - After examining the Forbes Global Misery and Reforn Index, you now can look at all taxes at all levels of national and local government and total government spending, The Overall Tax Burden and Government Spending Table (click here to download PDF) , which measures total tax burden in OECD countries as a percentage of gross domestic product, (“GDP”). This table uses the most recent official numbers available which are for 2004 and thus there is a time lag, but this gives us a good picture of what is happening. This Table is done to make sure that a reduction in the top marginal rate shown in the Misery & Reform Index is not lost through a change in the tax base, deductions or the progressiveness of rates or in the creation of new or hidden taxes at national, regional or local levels. This Table generally follows the Misery & Reform Index ranking with six of the top ten OECD countries in the Misery and Reform Index are also at the top of the Overall Tax Burden and Government Spending Table.
More specifically, this Table shows as does the Index that globally the tax bite dropped slightly from the prior year, with sixteen countries reducing total burden, six remaining constant and eight increasing tax burden. Despite this reduced overall taxation burden , it continues to remain in all of the countries above the levels of taxation of 1965 and only nine countries have decreased total taxation since1980 as a percentage of GDP. Of course, in absolute amounts, the government coffers have grown with their economies to historically unprecedented colossal amounts. The only surprise is there are not more dramatic tax revolutions as there have been historically. The confusing statements about the falling power and shrinking size of governments and the rising power of global corporations, at least in terms of what governments consume in taxes from the GDP of the country’s entrepreneurs and in absolute terms, is misplaced. Specifically, the nine exceptional countries, almost half now released from the burden of communism, that have decreased the amount of taxes in terms of the percentage of the GDP consumed by their government since 1980 are as follows: Belgium, Czech Republic, Hungary, Ireland, Japan, Netherlands, Poland, Slovakia and USA.
We also again include the Overall Government Spending results by each of the governments. Many governments are continuing the trend to reduce taxes, but the harder task of reducing spending is still to be accomplished. Only one-half of the countries reduced spending from the prior year. The solution to deficits is not to reverse the trend in tax reform, at least for those on the top of the Table and Index, but to control spending growth while the economic growth increase the absolute amount of tax revenue.
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tribes.tribe.net/america/p...add3f062a1
Comparing the Overall Tax Burden to the Overall Government Spending shows that all countries are spending more than they are taxing. This overall trend is not just a Keynesian cyclical exception. This difference in burden and spending is only partially covered by the increasing “budget deficit”. This difference is also partially covered by additional “revenues” that governments do not consider to be “taxes” including user fees and service charges, “profits” from government owned companies and monopolies and the sale of state assets, such as privatizations of state owned companies or sale of its real estate or its gold reserves. Thus the Overall Tax Burden is understated and hidden from taxpayers, but not from Forbes readers. Also note that the budget deficit that is covered by government borrowings require future taxes to repay the debt and currently service the interest payments (now among the top two or three expenditures of too many governments and these increased government borrowings also indirectly increase the interest rate paid the entrepreneur as an additional “tax”). The reality is the appearance of progress in tax burden in the analysis is partly masked and false due to government misreporting.
While the Misery & Reform Index charts the marginal tax cost on a growing business and its top executive, it is also important to look at the total taxes imposed by a country at all levels, national and local, as compared to its GDP to measure the overall burden.
Importantly, we also look in this table at Overall Government Spending at all levels of government, which in all cases is greater than the Overall Tax Burden. The resulting deficits are covered by debt, hidden taxes, profits from state owned monopolies and the privatization and sale of government assets. This allows the reader to be aware of the broader base of current and future total taxation issues. This is the latest official data from the OECD and is for 2004. It takes governments a year to count their colossal tax revenues and expenditures.