Quote:
Originally Posted by CaptainMidnight
Is there some part of the phrase "eliminate preferential treatment for capital gains" that you failed to understand?
The guy to whose post I responded wasn't talking about a 15% or 20% cap gains tax rate; he apparently advocates raising it now to 35% and eventually to 39.6%. I assume he thinks that would raise a lot of additional revenue. It wouldn't. It would primarily just produce distortions.
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I'm not sure that it would raise that much money, although I expect that it would raise some, especially if you treated cap gains and dividends identially so that there was no market incentive to structure the financed of companies to favor one over the other. However, to me, it is as much an issue of economic fairness as anything. Warren Buffet's oft told story of how his secretary pays a much greater percentage of her income in income taxes (since it's salary) than he pays of his (since it's all cap gains) perfectly illustrates this point.
And if you exempt the first $5k - 10k of cap gains and dividends from the normal tax rates -- as I proposed in my original post -- I doubt that you're going to have many of the elderly poor who get fucked out of their meager savings. But it's ridiculous to have millionaires paying less than half the tax that workers are paying.
See Table 1 in this article for a recent real world example:
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/20...ple-pay-taxes/
To me, a tax system that allows this to consistently happen, is indefensible and immoral.