Billionaires should not exist.
Billionaires should not exist.
You’ve evidently entirely misunderstood what I said. My entire point has been that stocks are worth money and I’m not sure what this “does not apply to you so you’re against it” is supposed to mean. I never said I was “against” stocks and whether I or my family own any is not only something you’d not know, but is also irrelevant.
My point was that when people say something like “Elton doesn’t have $200 billion, it’s just stock!” they’re acting like stocks aren’t real. I’m not.
It isn’t in the form of sequential 2 dollar bills and simon didn’t say!
Such little liquidity, couldn’t you just die?
…In the Arms of the Angels plays to images of sad Elon, Warren, Jeff…
For Germany the Informationen is wrong we have at maximum 45% income tax if you mske more then 170k a month and you pay 42% at 66 k. We literally have no wealth tax because of a loophole in regards to inheritance. Also Social security has a maximal ammount that does not increase after a certain income threshold.
The income ammount is not 100% correct but it is arround that ammount.
Also for wealthy people this practically doesnt apply. We have a flat 25% tax on income from financial investments like stocks. So while the engineer at BMW is paying 42% on all his income above 66,000 the Quandts as largest shareholder pay 25% on their roughly 1,000,000,000 dividend they receive every year.
Considering loopholes and tax evasion shemes billionaires are among the least taxed people in Germany.
in germany
In the world, but I agree with you, they love when people focus on income tax, takes the spotlight off them while their tax havens avoid all the capital gains tax they should being paying and their lobbyists vote to lower those rates
My ideal would be setting the brackets at the quintiles of household incomes, then setting the tax rates for those brackets at the share of national wealth all the brackets below a given bracket, plus the median point between that and the total including that bracket’s share of the wealth.
Allows for dynamic tax adjustment by pegging it to a calculation instead of a congressionally set number, and benefits the working classes by significantly shifting the national tax burden off of them whenever wealth accumulation starts peaking, effectively giving them free money to rebalance the economy with while taking the ultrawealthy through the nose for their shenanigans.
Not to mention how you can adopt similar models for other taxes bracket percentiles for total land value, for unrealized gains, for income tied to productive property assets like factory equipment, etc. etc. etc.
The real sticking point will be finding a way to address how the rich get most of their spending cash outside of direct income streams.
haha the US government is internally the most bitch made country in the west. When asked, an artist will depict a congressman straddling the average citizen, and the congressman is in turn being straddled by an executive.
Even foreign interests discuss the odd “fuckable” or “breedable” US politician, in how far they would bend over backwards for money. Photos of certain congressman photoshopped over a Japanese maids body have been circulating the UN.
Ironic to include Sweden, when they are one of the worst countries in Europe in terms of wealth distribution.
There’s not a single inheritance tax in Sweden, meaning if you’re super rich there, you and your family will stay rich forever. Creating larger and larger gaps between the 1% and the 99%.
This is just false. Those are the income tax rates for highest earners. Billionaires’ wealth is mostly tied up in stocks, property, and other investments. Someone like Jeff Bezos does not have $196bln in his bank account, like you and I have a few $100.
If we want to really tax billionaires, we need a wealth tax on any homes you own after your first, luxury cars, private planes and yachts, a passive tax on holding stock and stock options, and also clamp down on tax loop holes.
The thing about it is they will lease everything because not owning saves more than credit costs.
Focused attempts on the 1% are what is needed, decide what amount we want to extract and hold them to it. Do not let residential properties be owned by companies, only people. Progressive taxation on each subsequent property. Ban private planes - set regulations around average per passenger co2 emissions, yachts are registered in tax havens so jack up docking fees and non public country entry prices.
To put it simply, if I could sell a penknife with a force-field blade to a nobleman, it would be to his interest to force laws that would allow him to use it. Put that baldly, it sounds silly, but it is sound, psychologically. To make strategic sales, at strategic points, would be to create a pro-nucleics faction at court. – Isaac Asimov, Foundation
The problem is billionaires are going to put their resources into manipulating legislation and regulation so as to allow billionaires to exist, and to exist without being taxed or otherwise harassed for owning so much.
This was a problem with the train barons and industrialists (who believed the Great Depression was a fine time). We need to stop them before they have armies of AI-managed armies of killer robots with which to defend their fiefdoms.
I don’t know how to do that. So far, nobody knows how to successfully tax them or otherwise get them to reduce their personal power.