tax reform - where do you stand? (Page 2)
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2017-09-23 12:48 PM in reply to: dmiller5 |
Pro 15655 | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Wait......9% on beer and wine? I may want to revisit the 35% bracket. |
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2017-09-24 7:21 AM in reply to: Rogillio |
Expert 2373 Floriduh | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by Rogillio Frankly, I never understood why we deduct interest paid to a bank or mortgage company from our federal tax liability. Promotes home ownership. FWIW GW Bush equated this as an aspect of the American Dream. Not sure he was wrong, but he said that just prior to the housing market going in the dumper. |
2017-09-25 8:14 AM in reply to: Oysterboy |
Champion 10157 Alabama | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by Oysterboy Originally posted by Rogillio Frankly, I never understood why we deduct interest paid to a bank or mortgage company from our federal tax liability. Promotes home ownership. FWIW GW Bush equated this as an aspect of the American Dream. Not sure he was wrong, but he said that just prior to the housing market going in the dumper. The housing crisis started with Clinton and Bush just kept it going. They (the WHs) were pushing "home ownership" as metric of people living the dream. Home ownership is up, the world must be a better place! They pushed banks and lenders to make loans they never should have made just to get people into their 'own' home. |
2017-09-25 1:22 PM in reply to: Rogillio |
Champion 7553 Albuquerque, New Mexico | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by Rogillio Society should never tax food. Dang, The food you grow? I've not weighed in until now. IMO, a truly FLAT tax or a combination of truly FLAT taxes is the way to go. It can be done for rather modest amounts compared to the fictitious rates we have today. Flat income tax, maybe 5% regardless of income type (personal AND business). Flat consumption tax, maybe 5%, regardless of what you purchase (again, personal and business). As soon as there is one "exemption" or "threshold" the camel's nose is under the tent and we will return to where we are today as various interest groups lobby to be "in" rather than "out." As for mortgage interest, property taxes, charitable contributions, 401K & HSA's, are any of you old enough to remember when personal interest was an itemized deduction? The wailing of how eliminating this deduction would destroy the economy because people wouldn't carry debt without the tax incentive? Yup...didn't quite happen that way...
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2017-09-25 3:01 PM in reply to: spudone |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by spudone From the White House memo on goals: Goals for Tax Reform
Individual Reform
Business Reform
my opinion: - less tax brackets - whatever How did I miss this thread. my opinion: - less tax brackets - Personally I'm a fan of just one tax bracket so any decrease is a step in the right direction. |
2017-09-25 3:08 PM in reply to: McFuzz |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by McFuzz Originally posted by Rogillio Society should never tax food. Dang, The food you grow? I've not weighed in until now. IMO, a truly FLAT tax or a combination of truly FLAT taxes is the way to go. It can be done for rather modest amounts compared to the fictitious rates we have today. Flat income tax, maybe 5% regardless of income type (personal AND business). Flat consumption tax, maybe 5%, regardless of what you purchase (again, personal and business). As soon as there is one "exemption" or "threshold" the camel's nose is under the tent and we will return to where we are today as various interest groups lobby to be "in" rather than "out." As for mortgage interest, property taxes, charitable contributions, 401K & HSA's, are any of you old enough to remember when personal interest was an itemized deduction? The wailing of how eliminating this deduction would destroy the economy because people wouldn't carry debt without the tax incentive? Yup...didn't quite happen that way...
Agree, plus it gives individuals control of their tax structure. |
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2017-09-25 3:09 PM in reply to: tuwood |
Master 5557 , California | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? On the AMT, it's basically an entire second tax law just for rich(er) people who are not crafty enough to dodge it. And since it was never indexed to inflation, the threshold for "rich" encompasses more of the middle class every year. Dumb law, poorly written, jettison it. |
2017-09-25 3:15 PM in reply to: spudone |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? One thing I learned long ago is that there's the tax laws as they're presented to the masses and then there's the reality of what it actually is. We often hear about the argument of "the top rate used to be 90%" (or whatever it was) so the rich need to pay more. However, back in that day there were so many loopholes in the system that nobody paid anywhere near that rate and the effective tax rate was probably much lower than it is today. Some people have very low taxes and some have very high taxes and it's all about how their income stream comes in. I own a business that's an S-Corp which means all bottom line profits flow through as personal income to me and my family. I get absolutely rocked on taxes because I don't get to take advantage of most of the deductions that get phased out based on income. The whole thing is so jacked up. |
2017-09-25 6:04 PM in reply to: tuwood |
Master 5557 , California | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? I own a business that's an S-Corp which means all bottom line profits flow through as personal income to me and my family. I get absolutely rocked on taxes because I don't get to take advantage of most of the deductions that get phased out based on income. Well, you should get some advantage by paying yourself a small "income" and taking the rest as a distribution, which is helpful in an S-Corp. Unless they've been cracking down on that - I've been out of the running my own business phase for a few years now. Medical and other deductions are def better as a C-Corp, though. |
2017-09-26 8:52 AM in reply to: spudone |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by spudone I own a business that's an S-Corp which means all bottom line profits flow through as personal income to me and my family. I get absolutely rocked on taxes because I don't get to take advantage of most of the deductions that get phased out based on income. Well, you should get some advantage by paying yourself a small "income" and taking the rest as a distribution, which is helpful in an S-Corp. Unless they've been cracking down on that - I've been out of the running my own business phase for a few years now. Medical and other deductions are def better as a C-Corp, though. Pretty much the only loophole I can take advantage of is exactly what you're mentioning. I pay myself a modest CEO salary which is full W-2 income and taxed with social security. I then distribute the rest of my earnings out of profit which is regular income and not subject to social security. So basically for the difference between the social security max and my paycheck I get a tax break of around 15% (both company and employee sides put together). It nets a difference of maybe $7k bottom line on the year, which I'll certainly take but the majority of my income comes through distributions which are still taxed at full rates with most deductions phased out due to my income. |
2017-09-26 12:07 PM in reply to: tuwood |
Master 5557 , California | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by tuwood Originally posted by spudone I own a business that's an S-Corp which means all bottom line profits flow through as personal income to me and my family. I get absolutely rocked on taxes because I don't get to take advantage of most of the deductions that get phased out based on income. Well, you should get some advantage by paying yourself a small "income" and taking the rest as a distribution, which is helpful in an S-Corp. Unless they've been cracking down on that - I've been out of the running my own business phase for a few years now. Medical and other deductions are def better as a C-Corp, though. Pretty much the only loophole I can take advantage of is exactly what you're mentioning. I pay myself a modest CEO salary which is full W-2 income and taxed with social security. I then distribute the rest of my earnings out of profit which is regular income and not subject to social security. So basically for the difference between the social security max and my paycheck I get a tax break of around 15% (both company and employee sides put together). It nets a difference of maybe $7k bottom line on the year, which I'll certainly take but the majority of my income comes through distributions which are still taxed at full rates with most deductions phased out due to my income. The pendulum can swing the other way for an S-Corp also. Since your business taxes pass through to your personal ones, if you run the business at a loss for a year (for example, taking a loan so you can expand more), that makes your income artificially low that year. Which makes it a good time to do all your normally tax-heavy stuff - such as a Roth IRA conversion, things like that. You probably know all this already, just throwing it out there. I'm not a tax attorney or offering any legal advice here |
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2017-09-26 12:16 PM in reply to: spudone |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by spudone Originally posted by tuwood Originally posted by spudone I own a business that's an S-Corp which means all bottom line profits flow through as personal income to me and my family. I get absolutely rocked on taxes because I don't get to take advantage of most of the deductions that get phased out based on income. Well, you should get some advantage by paying yourself a small "income" and taking the rest as a distribution, which is helpful in an S-Corp. Unless they've been cracking down on that - I've been out of the running my own business phase for a few years now. Medical and other deductions are def better as a C-Corp, though. Pretty much the only loophole I can take advantage of is exactly what you're mentioning. I pay myself a modest CEO salary which is full W-2 income and taxed with social security. I then distribute the rest of my earnings out of profit which is regular income and not subject to social security. So basically for the difference between the social security max and my paycheck I get a tax break of around 15% (both company and employee sides put together). It nets a difference of maybe $7k bottom line on the year, which I'll certainly take but the majority of my income comes through distributions which are still taxed at full rates with most deductions phased out due to my income. The pendulum can swing the other way for an S-Corp also. Since your business taxes pass through to your personal ones, if you run the business at a loss for a year (for example, taking a loan so you can expand more), that makes your income artificially low that year. Which makes it a good time to do all your normally tax-heavy stuff - such as a Roth IRA conversion, things like that. You probably know all this already, just throwing it out there. I'm not a tax attorney or offering any legal advice here The loan stuff seems like it helps, but doesn't that much. I took out a loan last year to do some expanding and the only thing I get to deduct is the interest. So I made a hefty profit and paid the loan down, but none of that profit was deductible because it all went towards premium and little interest. I do agree the pendulum can swing, but it's a balance. Obviously it's not a good long term strategy to run a company at a loss, but i do try to deduct as much as I can legally do. I just feel that a more fair system is something that's more equitable to all versus charging higher percentages to small business owners who earn regular income versus those who own large businesses and only get dividends. Just come up with a tax in the middle somewhere that makes sense for everyone. It's so stinking complicated. |
2017-09-26 12:35 PM in reply to: tuwood |
Master 5557 , California | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? As a side note, I don't really think a true flat tax will ever pass (too many special interests). But if it did, one thing I worry about is the loss of those kinds of deductions. What I mean is that expanding a business is a big risk. Anytime you run at a loss, it is something you don't want to do for the long haul, as you mentioned. Some deductions or deferrals soften that blow and allow business owners to take on a little bit more risk. I think this helps entrepreneurship and I wouldn't want that to go away. A little off topic, sorry - just my $.02 |
2017-09-26 12:55 PM in reply to: spudone |
Champion 10157 Alabama | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by spudone As a side note, I don't really think a true flat tax will ever pass (too many special interests). But if it did, one thing I worry about is the loss of those kinds of deductions. What I mean is that expanding a business is a big risk. Anytime you run at a loss, it is something you don't want to do for the long haul, as you mentioned. Some deductions or deferrals soften that blow and allow business owners to take on a little bit more risk. I think this helps entrepreneurship and I wouldn't want that to go away. A little off topic, sorry - just my $.02 While it sounds simple enough to 'revise our tax code' it does seem like that whack-a-mole game. It's hard to see all ramifications of changes. |
2017-09-26 2:04 PM in reply to: spudone |
Champion 7553 Albuquerque, New Mexico | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by spudone As a side note, I don't really think a true flat tax will ever pass (too many special interests). But if it did, one thing I worry about is the loss of those kinds of deductions. What I mean is that expanding a business is a big risk. Anytime you run at a loss, it is something you don't want to do for the long haul, as you mentioned. Some deductions or deferrals soften that blow and allow business owners to take on a little bit more risk. I think this helps entrepreneurship and I wouldn't want that to go away. A little off topic, sorry - just my $.02 Not off topic. I agree, too many special interests will oppose losing their status. I'm curious about your statement "expanding a business is a big risk." Why do you say that? Is it risky to build slowly, using cash flow to expand? Is it risky to not expand? There are more risks to borrowing money to expand, but then...do we want a tax code that rewards extra risk (which is what we have today)?
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2017-09-26 2:38 PM in reply to: McFuzz |
Master 5557 , California | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by McFuzz Originally posted by spudone As a side note, I don't really think a true flat tax will ever pass (too many special interests). But if it did, one thing I worry about is the loss of those kinds of deductions. What I mean is that expanding a business is a big risk. Anytime you run at a loss, it is something you don't want to do for the long haul, as you mentioned. Some deductions or deferrals soften that blow and allow business owners to take on a little bit more risk. I think this helps entrepreneurship and I wouldn't want that to go away. A little off topic, sorry - just my $.02 Not off topic. I agree, too many special interests will oppose losing their status. I'm curious about your statement "expanding a business is a big risk." Why do you say that? Is it risky to build slowly, using cash flow to expand? Is it risky to not expand? There are more risks to borrowing money to expand, but then...do we want a tax code that rewards extra risk (which is what we have today)? It's a balance. You want to have some level of risk taking, venture capital, etc - otherwise heavily entrenched older businesses will almost always dominate new startups. I was in the "build slowly" camp with my business. I have worked for other startups that were operating at a loss for several years before getting on the path to profitability. There are pros and cons to each. |
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2017-09-26 2:55 PM in reply to: tuwood |
Expert 2373 Floriduh | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by tuwood - 15% business rate - Yes, should be 0%, but 15% would be a huge improvement and send our economy into a huge growth period. This I'm a little less than supportive of. I'm all in favor of dropping corporate tax rates (and corporate welfare along with it), but the record on cutting tax rates leading to lengthy economic growth is pretty shaky, no bump after Bush tax cuts and look at what has happened in Kansas and Louisiana. I just think we need to be careful and limit the use of dynamic scoring to justify tax cuts. It is not the panacea that many imagine it to be. |
2017-09-26 5:44 PM in reply to: spudone |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by spudone Originally posted by McFuzz Originally posted by spudone As a side note, I don't really think a true flat tax will ever pass (too many special interests). But if it did, one thing I worry about is the loss of those kinds of deductions. What I mean is that expanding a business is a big risk. Anytime you run at a loss, it is something you don't want to do for the long haul, as you mentioned. Some deductions or deferrals soften that blow and allow business owners to take on a little bit more risk. I think this helps entrepreneurship and I wouldn't want that to go away. A little off topic, sorry - just my $.02 Not off topic. I agree, too many special interests will oppose losing their status. I'm curious about your statement "expanding a business is a big risk." Why do you say that? Is it risky to build slowly, using cash flow to expand? Is it risky to not expand? There are more risks to borrowing money to expand, but then...do we want a tax code that rewards extra risk (which is what we have today)? It's a balance. You want to have some level of risk taking, venture capital, etc - otherwise heavily entrenched older businesses will almost always dominate new startups. I was in the "build slowly" camp with my business. I have worked for other startups that were operating at a loss for several years before getting on the path to profitability. There are pros and cons to each. agree that it's a balance. The risk for me is primarily hiring new employees or investing in marketing. If I hire a $100k a year engineer I have to ensure I have enough work for them. If I wait until I grow enough and then cash flow the engineer I have to decide how long to cashflow them. I used 3 months as a general rule, but it was still very risky because the sales often didn't materialize and I'd end up losing money for several months before I started making it again. It's easy to say build up 3 years of reserves or something like that, but it's very difficult to get to that point without investing in new employees which is counter to improving the bottom line in the short term. |
2017-09-26 5:49 PM in reply to: Oysterboy |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by Oysterboy Originally posted by tuwood This I'm a little less than supportive of. I'm all in favor of dropping corporate tax rates (and corporate welfare along with it), but the record on cutting tax rates leading to lengthy economic growth is pretty shaky, no bump after Bush tax cuts and look at what has happened in Kansas and Louisiana. I just think we need to be careful and limit the use of dynamic scoring to justify tax cuts. It is not the panacea that many imagine it to be. - 15% business rate - Yes, should be 0%, but 15% would be a huge improvement and send our economy into a huge growth period. I always feel the track record is almost impossible to know because there's so many moving parts. You can have a cut over here, but 800 other things happening over there such as a mortgage crisis or whatever that hides the benefits. I also agree that the scoring is complete garbage. Remember, the ACA scored revenue neutral. My very simplistic view on things regarding the corporate tax cuts is how businesses react to them. If all my customers receive an additional 15% to their bottom line as an example they have 15% they could potentially spend on new employees, new infrastructure, etc. That money now goes from them to me (hopefully). I then in turn send that money to either new employees or my vendors, etc. Our tax system taxes money every time it changes hands, so if that 15% that was originally going to the government goes through me and another company and another, etc. the overall tax to the government goes up. |
2017-09-26 8:10 PM in reply to: tuwood |
Expert 2373 Floriduh | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by tuwood Originally posted by Oysterboy Originally posted by tuwood This I'm a little less than supportive of. I'm all in favor of dropping corporate tax rates (and corporate welfare along with it), but the record on cutting tax rates leading to lengthy economic growth is pretty shaky, no bump after Bush tax cuts and look at what has happened in Kansas and Louisiana. I just think we need to be careful and limit the use of dynamic scoring to justify tax cuts. It is not the panacea that many imagine it to be. - 15% business rate - Yes, should be 0%, but 15% would be a huge improvement and send our economy into a huge growth period. I always feel the track record is almost impossible to know because there's so many moving parts. You can have a cut over here, but 800 other things happening over there such as a mortgage crisis or whatever that hides the benefits. I also agree that the scoring is complete garbage. Remember, the ACA scored revenue neutral. My very simplistic view on things regarding the corporate tax cuts is how businesses react to them. If all my customers receive an additional 15% to their bottom line as an example they have 15% they could potentially spend on new employees, new infrastructure, etc. That money now goes from them to me (hopefully). I then in turn send that money to either new employees or my vendors, etc. Our tax system taxes money every time it changes hands, so if that 15% that was originally going to the government goes through me and another company and another, etc. the overall tax to the government goes up. I have little doubt that the tax cuts, if they got into the hands of small businesses would have a beneficial effect because money would get into the hands of people that will actually buy things and stimulate the economy. However, we all know that big business, and their legions of lobbyists, will make sure they get an outsized share of the pie. The money ends in the hands of people who poorly stimulate the economy and we will end up with a bigger IOU to pass on to my and your kid's generation. I've seen this movie before, always seems to end the same way. |
2017-09-28 9:01 AM in reply to: Oysterboy |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Originally posted by Oysterboy Originally posted by tuwood I have little doubt that the tax cuts, if they got into the hands of small businesses would have a beneficial effect because money would get into the hands of people that will actually buy things and stimulate the economy. However, we all know that big business, and their legions of lobbyists, will make sure they get an outsized share of the pie. The money ends in the hands of people who poorly stimulate the economy and we will end up with a bigger IOU to pass on to my and your kid's generation. I've seen this movie before, always seems to end the same way. Originally posted by Oysterboy Originally posted by tuwood This I'm a little less than supportive of. I'm all in favor of dropping corporate tax rates (and corporate welfare along with it), but the record on cutting tax rates leading to lengthy economic growth is pretty shaky, no bump after Bush tax cuts and look at what has happened in Kansas and Louisiana. I just think we need to be careful and limit the use of dynamic scoring to justify tax cuts. It is not the panacea that many imagine it to be. - 15% business rate - Yes, should be 0%, but 15% would be a huge improvement and send our economy into a huge growth period. I always feel the track record is almost impossible to know because there's so many moving parts. You can have a cut over here, but 800 other things happening over there such as a mortgage crisis or whatever that hides the benefits. I also agree that the scoring is complete garbage. Remember, the ACA scored revenue neutral. My very simplistic view on things regarding the corporate tax cuts is how businesses react to them. If all my customers receive an additional 15% to their bottom line as an example they have 15% they could potentially spend on new employees, new infrastructure, etc. That money now goes from them to me (hopefully). I then in turn send that money to either new employees or my vendors, etc. Our tax system taxes money every time it changes hands, so if that 15% that was originally going to the government goes through me and another company and another, etc. the overall tax to the government goes up. One thing we can all probably agree on is a hatred of lobbyists. lol |
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2017-09-28 9:12 AM in reply to: tuwood |
Pro 9391 Omaha, NE | Subject: RE: tax reform - where do you stand? Here's the framework released by the Trump Administration: Key Provisions in the Framework Corporate Taxes
Individual Taxes
The part I love the most for me personally is:
This would give me a substantial tax savings on the majority of my income which is currently taxed at my personal income bracket. |
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