Obama’s New Plan: Bring Our Money Home?

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Obama’s New Plan: Bring Our Money Home?

Barack Obama has an exciting new plan to raise revenue: make companies pay taxes on the money they earn. Okay, so it’s not new, and it’s not that exciting. But it is a little more complicated than that.

Basically, the current plan is designed to tax income earned overseas, whether or not it’s returned to the US. Right now, if Apple sells an iPod in Italy, they pay Italian taxes on their Italian income. As long as they keep the money in Italy, they don’t have to pay US income taxes on it.

  • The case for the plan is that it closes a giant loophole in the current tax scheme. And

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Today in the Taxosphere

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Today in the Taxosphere

Mr. Donald Trump, famous for announcing the line “You’re FIRED” on the popular NBC show The Apprentice, was interviewed today by Neil Cuvato from the Fox News Network. Mr. Trump announced that he doesn’t approve of the proposed New York Assembly Democrats’ Millionaire Tax, which will bring millions of dollars to the hemorrhaging MTA.

Under the plan, people who earn over $1 million in New York state will pay an income tax surcharge of about 3/4 of 1 percent for five years. In all, it would raise over $5 billion for mass transit.

Mayor Bloomberg and Mr. Trump would contribute to the transportation funds as will… Read more…

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Why a Tobacco Tax is Great News for Smokers

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Why a Tobacco Tax is Great News for Smokers

Nobody feels more strongly about high taxes than smokers do, and with good reason: it’s incredibly easy for politicians to raise taxes on smoking, and the average non-smoker doesn’t have a lot of sympathy. So it’s no surprise that the news is full of stories about planned cigarette tax hikes.

But why is it so easy to raise taxes on smokers? Why not bottled-water drinkers, car owners, or life insurance buyers? The reason is simple: cigarettes have the combination of addictive power and brand loyalty. Very few smokers give up if the cost of their smokes goes up 10% — in fact, basically no other product has the long-term resistance to price changes.

It’s also… Read more…

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Why Barney Frank’s Phony AIG Outrage is Worse Than the Bonuses

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Why Barney Frank’s Phony AIG Outrage is Worse Than the Bonuses

It’s an outrage — handing someone millions of dollars when his employer is nearly bankrupt? It’s ridiculous — larding paychecks with taxpayer dollars? It’s unacceptable — paying out a giant bonus in the face of a huge recession?

It’s just business. Even though Barney Frank expressed outrage over AIG’s recent bonuses, people are (deliberately?) forgetting that AIG is a massive company, with over 100,000 employees in 130 countries. And the team responsible for most of the offices was a remarkably tiny group of remarkably arrogant traders.

If AIG’s structured products team is collecting these bonuses, it is, indeed, an outrage. But it’s much more likely that the bonus recipients… Read more…

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“Dear IRS…”

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“Dear IRS…”

A single letter to the editor in a small Texas town has made it around the country in just a few weeks. Ed Barnett, a typical taxpayer, penned this justified rant to his hometown Wichita Times Record News (I am assuming their archrival is the Wichita Daily Weekly Recorder Courier Journal Democrat-Republican):

Dear IRS,

I am sorry to inform you that I will not be able to pay taxes owed April 15, but all is not lost.

I have paid these taxes: accounts receivable tax, building permit tax, CDL tax, cigarette tax, corporate income tax, dog licence tax, federal income tax, unemployment tax, gasoline tax, hunting licence tax, fishing licence tax, waterfowl stamp tax, inheritance

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Tax Mercenaries are a Stimulus Plan

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Tax Mercenaries are a Stimulus Plan

Today the IRS stopped using private tax collectors. That’s right: they won’t let a single tax mercenary collect overdue taxes.

This sounds great — less money spent on expensive government contractors, and less of our private information being leaked out of the government. But is it really the right decision?

The basic argument against private tax collectors is that we’re paying them to go after money people already owe the government. If they’re not afraid of the Feds, the argument goes, why would they fear some random company? If the companies don’t have any way to convince people rationally, it’s a fair assumption that they’re just using dirtier tactics than the IRS,… Read more…

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Reid Hoffman’s Accidental Plot to Bloat the Deficit

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Reid Hoffman’s Accidental Plot to Bloat the Deficit

Reid Hoffman (CEO of LinkedIn, and self-proclaimed ‘free-market socialist‘) says we should let startups bail us out. As an investor in more than sixty startups, he ought to know how effective they can be.

His plan comes in three stages:

  1. He wants a program that will provide small loans (up to $50,000) for startups.
  2. He wants to change the current skilled-worker visa system, so that instead of a quota (65,000 H-1B immigrants per year), there’s an unlimited number of immigrants and a 10% payroll tax on each, to be reinvested in job training for Americans.
  3. He wants the government to match investments for venture capitalists and angel investors

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Seven Reasons Conservatives Should Love the New Obama Budget

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Seven Reasons Conservatives Should Love the New Obama Budget

The Dow is back down to where it was last time we had a charismatic Democratic president making big, budget-busting promises. And this time, there’s not an intern in sight to spoil the party. We all know we’re in for a giant spending spree: billions for solar-powered underwater basket-weaving communes, all paid for by taxes on people who, y’know, make stuff and do stuff.

But is it that big a disaster? Obama spent ten years teaching at the University of Chicago, a center of modern conservative thought. Did a decade of rubbing shoulders with Milton Friedman’s disciples rub off on him at all?

The answer is yes. In his budget speech last week, he announced… Read more…

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How Much Of Citi Did We Already Own?

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How Much Of Citi Did We Already Own?

Congratulations: you, the taxpayer, now own even more of what used to be America’s biggest bank. That’s right: the government is once again raising its stake in Citigroup by switching from preferred stock (which pays a high dividend, and is basically like a bond) to common stock (which is closer to just owning part of the business).

So, in theory, We The People own 36% of Citibank. And this is considered very big news.

But is it? Consider how much the government is already involved in Citi:

  • Most of Citibank’s deposits are guaranteed by the FDIC. Which means that when you deposit money at Citibank, you’re really lending it to the

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Why Drivers Should Love a Mileage Tax

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Why Drivers Should Love a Mileage Tax

A proposed gas tax led to some red faces at the White House earlier this week. Ray LaHood — the only Republican in the Obama administration — suggested it, perhaps in an effort to put the ‘tax’ back in ‘tax-and-spend’.

To the average driver, paying for something you used to get for free sounds like a bad deal. Five reasons it’s actually a great bargain instead:

1) The ‘fringe benefits’ are fantastic: part of the mileage-tax plan requires installing a global network of GPS-based car-tracking systems. There are privacy concerns, of course, and those will need to be addressed. But this plan also makes it possible to do some amazing things. From… Read more…

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