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After comments from Mr Buffett that some millionaires paid a smaller percentage of their incomes in taxes than many middle-class families ”” he pays a lower effective tax rate than his secretary ”” the Obama administration has proposed the Buffett Rule.
The White House's website describes the rule that no household making more than $1 million should pay a smaller share of their income in taxes than middle-class families pay.
"The Buffett Rule would limit the degree to which the best-off can take advantage of loopholes and tax rates that allow them to pay less of their income in taxes than middle-class families."
The ACTU will call on the government to adopt an Australian version of the rule that would ensure millionaires who principally derived their income from capital gains paid at least as much in tax as a proportion of their incomes as ordinary working Australians.
Mr Lyons said a tax mechanism would be developed so that regardless of a person's source of income everyone would be taxed on a level playing field. "The income tax system is absurdly inequitable when it comes to taxing the mega-rich."
Interesting idea from Warren Buffett/President Obama that proposes that if households earn $1m a year that have to pay tax at at least the rate that middle income earners are currently paying.
What they are suggesting is to cut through the creative accounting, special tax breaks, whatever and ensure that the wealthiest people in our society contribute to the tax base at least proportionally the same as middle income tax payers.
What do you think ?
Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/victoria/u...onaires-tax-20120511-1yil5.html#ixzz1ubUZAaL5
Her tax has been paid at the corporate level. To tax at the corporate level and then at the individual level is double taxation.Having said that, my Mum will earn over $1m in fraked dividends this year and will pay zero in tax (obviously excluding tax paid by the company before the dividend). That came from her inheriting half my grandfather's estate, which again caused no tax to be paid on that transfer. By most definitions that would make her either wealthy or rich and yet she pays no tax. I think it's things like that that WB was talking about.
Her tax has been paid at the corporate level. To tax at the corporate level and then at the individual level is double taxation.
If her marginal rate of income tax is higher than the corporate tax rate, she would still pay the difference on a franked dividend.I understand that. But in the end, if she was working and earning that money PAYG her tax rate would be significantly higher than the 30% already paid.
The old DLP proposal was,IE 0 - 20k = 0% tax
20 - 80 = 25% tax
80k + = 35% tax
If her marginal rate of income tax is higher than the corporate tax rate, she would still pay the difference on a franked dividend.
This is after offsetting the inputation credits accumulated from the tax-free threshold and the marginal rate below 30% with the marginal rates above 30%.
The old DLP proposal was,
0 - 30k = -30% tax (effectively a welfare benefit for incomes below $30k).
30k+ = 30% tax (corporate tax rate).
It's debatable where the tax free threshold should be set, but, that combined with no deductions on salary income would really put a lot of ATO staff and tax accountants out of work.
Clever lady.All the shares are held by a private company of which she is the largest shareholder. Essentially, she only pays tax if she draws a dividend over the 30% marginal tax rate (I don't think she ever does). In effect, she pays a reduced rate of tax on any amount she chooses to save, whereas a PAYG employee does not have that luxury, outside of the super system.
No, the tax free threshold would operate as it does now.That last dollar from $29,999 to $30,000 will cost me $10k in tax.
Clever lady.
Kerry Packer would be proud.
The problem here is the tax system. If the highest marginal income tax rate was the same as the corporate tax rate, there would be no underlying need to corporatise passive income to minimise tax.
No, the tax free threshold would operate as it does now.
If you earn $30k, you pay no tax.
If you earn $40k, you pat $3k tax (30% of $10k ($40k-$30k))
If you earn $20k, you get a welfare benefit of $3k.
Starting at a welfare benefit of $9k at no income, you effectively contribute 30% of every dollar you earn, but you don't start paying tax until you earn over $30k and then only on that portion of income over $30k.
Personally i'm all for a flat (or severely flattened) tax. Say 2 or 3 brackets based on incomes, no other taxes, and no deductions. Would make things a lot easier and fairier, but put a whole ****e load of ATO staff and accountants out of jobs...
IE 0 - 20k = 0% tax
20 - 80 = 25% tax
80k + = 35% tax
Pure hypothetical figures but no creative accountancy, no other state (etc) taxes and thats that.
A gov should figure what they NEED (not want for pork barrelling) and then charge that and stick within that budget or need a referendum to increase (and explain why the need more) taxes
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