Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You mean saying that I don't know, but saying that it should be fair isn't
responsive? Basically, if you're more well-off, you should pay more both numerically and as a percentage. Thus, if someone makes $30K a year and has three kids, she shouldn't be paying as high a percentage of her income as someone who makes $250K a year and has three kids. Let's say say the $30Ker pays 10% (which I think is way, way too high, but ok). That's a pretty big percentage of a small income. Now take the $250Ker. She's paying $25K, which while not insignificant, leaves a whopping $225K for expenses, whatever. What would be wrong with the $250Ker paying 20%. This still leaves $200K, which is plenty to live on. Obviously, this can't be an absolute scale, but the trend should be obvious. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "Dave" wrote in message ... On 3 Dec 2006 21:07:03 -0800, "Peter" said: Not at all. I said that it should be somewhere between 10 and 50 percent. How is that "going to water"? So - you'd be satisfied if the rich paid 10% of their income as tax? You'd consider that they were apying their fair share? Have you also missed what I was asking, Peter? My question was not what percentage of each individual's income he should pay for income taxes. I was what percentage of the aggregate income taxes paid by all taxpayers should be born by each of the three groups I identified. Different question entirely. I was looking for a breakdown among the three groups. Jon's 10-50% simply wasn't responsive to the question, since it didn't differentiate among the 3 groups. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Pretty but unsailable | Boat Building |