What is a fair tax rate for people on over $1m?


What is a fair tax rate for people who make more than $1 Million per year in revenue?  

165 members have voted

  1. 1. What is a fair tax rate for people on over $1m?



Recommended Posts

Again, because this doesn't work. Flat rate taxes only causes disparity between the classes and furthers the poor get poorer and rich get richer scenario. Lower classes suffer the most while upper classes barely feel a hit. And you know what happens when the gap becomes too large? Complete collapse of economy and government. Go read your history.

Besides, the government has to make up this deficit somehow if they did a flat rate. This money won't come from out of no where.

LOL You are saying the current tiered system does not induce class disparity or class warfare? Well, maybe it does or it doesn't, but it's being USED to further class warfare (the rich should pay more, and we bottom 50% shouldn't pay a thing).

No, you make comments like the rich won't feel a hit, and that is just baloney. How do you know? Are you guessing? Ratios stay the same. Do you have a 40,000 a month property tax or almost that mortgage? Do you think money is infinite for the rich. Nonsense.

Who is to say a flat tax would/wouldn't fix anything, the current system isn't working. You want to make a bigger class gap, you let people not pay taxes, and you let the rich pay a lot of taxes. Then one will be mad at the other, and one will be counting on the other. It's not a nice scenario.

And the history scenario you mentioned also requires the rich to be in charge. We have a representative democracy. That isn't the same. Wouldn't work the way you think. Plus, we have 400 million people, not 6 million and 10,000 of them are the aristocratic. Things are different.

Ugh, not this again. Your not earning less money but making more. Evening after tax your still making more money.

Here's another video about income inequality

Of course you are earning less money. The government is taking more from you therefore you "earn" less of it. Most people judge what they earn on what they actually see, what they take home.

If you are taxed at 20% then you take home 80 cents on the dollar. If you are taxed at 40% then you only take home 60 cents. You are in effect earning less once you reach a certain threshold. Yes it's only taxed at that rate on monies earned above that threshold but once you get there you are still taking home less than you would have been if the tax was only 20%.

LOL You are saying the current tiered system does not induce class disparity or class warfare? Well, maybe it does or it doesn't, but it's being USED to further class warfare (the rich should pay more, and we bottom 50% shouldn't pay a thing).

Protip. The lower and middle classes make up the majority of people.

No, you make comments like the rich won't feel a hit, and that is just baloney. How do you know? Are you guessing? Ratios stay the same. Do you have a 40,000 a month property tax or almost that mortgage? Do you think money is infinite for the rich. Nonsense.

Oh boohoo, they won't be able to buy the latest million dollar car or that 3rd home or that latest private jet. Big damn whoop. Also, no one said they had to buy a house with 40k monthly property taxes. Pretty sure if you can afford that, you can afford to pay more in taxes.

And the history scenario you mentioned also requires the rich to be in charge. We have a representative democracy. That isn't the same. Wouldn't work the way you think. Plus, we have 400 million people, not 6 million and 10,000 of them are the aristocratic. Things are different.

If the government was truly a representative government, then it would be feasible for anyone (within the legal limits) to become a politician. However, you have to be pretty wealthy to get elected due to outrageous campaign costs and such. You don't see lower or middle class politicians. They are are all rich. Guess what? They do what's in their best interests. The entire government is ran by the rich and corporations. That's hardly representative.

As I pointed out in another thread, before capitalism it was common for communities to band together and help each other. Those with often helped those without, and *pause for gasp* they even healed the sick for free! Now if you do it, you just get told that you're a horrible un-American socialist. There's nothing upstanding or righteous about being a greedy SOB.

Again, because this doesn't work. Flat rate taxes only causes disparity between the classes and furthers the poor get poorer and rich get richer scenario. Lower classes suffer the most while upper classes barely feel a hit. And you know what happens when the gap becomes too large? Complete collapse of economy and government. Go read your history.

Besides, the government has to make up this deficit somehow if they did a flat rate. This money won't come from out of no where.

How are the poor going to get poorer when using my idea? I'm not asking them to pay more taxes.

And, regarding your comment about government deficit, if it is a fiscally responsible government then it would either have no or very small deficit. People, no matter how rich or poor they are, should not have to pay for government's mistakes.

I can understand about having millions of dollars. There's meaningful freedom that comes with that, but once you get much beyond that I have to tell you, it's the same hamburger.

Bill Gates.

You keep quoting Gates. The dude is obviously rich and clearly very philanthropic. Good for him. If he is such a goody-goody and thinks rich should pay more, why doesn't he give his money to the government. Just because he finds no joy in having lots of money, there is nothing to say that the feeling applies across the board.

  • 1 month later...

think about that. if people know making over 1 million, they're going to be taxed 90-100% like you voted, what motivation would anyone have to make over 1 million? sounds great until you realize CEOs and entrepreneurs who work hard to get where they are make a lot of what we have possible. sure, they make A LOT more than the average, but why should they be forced to pay more than anyone else? I say tax them the same 35% that is in place now, but require them to pay that tax regardless of investments, etc. 35% of all income is enough for anyone to be taxed

Because making $1 million is still better than making $999,999. But assuming your silly premise is true, if the potential $1 million becomes a quitter, you'd have other people being able to earn more because the quitter chose to quit. I'd rather have 10 people making only $100K than one person making $1 million and 9 people making $0. It's not like if everybody tried really, really hard they can all make $1 million. There's only a limited amount of money to go around, and it's going to be distributed--whether it's to 1 person or 10 persons. Those that try harder will make more, regardless of tax rate, and there's always incentive to try harder.

OK, flat taxers. Let's say all income above a predetermined allowance for cost of living (say, about $50K) is taxed at the same rate of 25% for EVERYBODY. AND we consider capital gains the same as regular income. How 'bout it?

You keep quoting Gates. The dude is obviously rich and clearly very philanthropic. Good for him. If he is such a goody-goody and thinks rich should pay more, why doesn't he give his money to the government. Just because he finds no joy in having lots of money, there is nothing to say that the feeling applies across the board.

Because the government isn't allowed to take donations. Gates pays his taxes as required by law, and I doubt he hides his personal money offshore to avoid paying them. Maybe Microsoft does something like this, but I highly doubt Gates does.

I'm not saying that poor should be punished more or punished at all. What I am saying, and have been saying, is that rich should not have to be paying higher percentage of tax on their income just because the government decided that they (rich) can absorb the cost.

They should because they get (and take) more out of the system. Think about this. The US government is essentially like a security guard for your money. It protects us from enemies traipsing in and plundering whatever we own. If I have only $5 to my name, I don't really give **** if somebody steals it. It's everything I have, but it's still only $5. But if I have $5 million, I have a lot to lose. The problem is that the government can't devote only enough resources to protect just $5,000,005. It's has to devote enough resources to protect ANY amount. So what good is charging the same flat rate for everybody? If I have $5, it's a rounding error compared to the guy with $5 million. Taxing somebody with so little money is nothing more than an token gesture to make it seem more fair to the wealthy. Let the guy with $5 keep his buck and a quarter. Maybe he'll go buy a McDouble and allow Ronald McDonald to be richer.

We can talk about making the tax system fair, but the main problem is that the economic system isn't fair to begin with. Is it fair that if one person starts with zero, it's nearly impossible for him to make $1 billion no matter how hard he works, yet if a person was gifted $1 billion by Daddy, he could easily double or triple that money? Right now it's too easy to make money by just having money. We're encouraging a society of idle rich and destitute poor with practically nobody in between.

incentive to be in the lower class

incentive to be in the lower class

incentive to be in the lower class

:laugh:

Glassed Silver:mac

he's not saying that there is every incentive to keep your income LOWER than 1Mil. What a progressive tax rate really does is it imposes a light speed barrier to income. The closer you approach it the more you start to not gain velocity and start picking up mass.

same rate as everyone else. Everyone should pay the same percentage. Just because you have more money, doesn't mean you should have to pay a bigger share of your money than everyone else. But, they should have to pay it, there should not be tax shelters or other loop holes that allows them to pay less.

The problem I have with this is the Fat Cats who run companies like British Gas (for example).

There was a report a few years ago that the company was disappointed they only made ?14 Billion profit instead of their projected ?16 Billion. If they are making billions of pounds in profit, I am paying far too much for gas.

The other issue is bankers / city traders earning bonuses and salaries over ?1 million. Why? I don't think what they do for a living deserves that much money, not when people who save peoples lives (like firefighters and doctors) earn way loads less.

So when you get some executive earning loads for simply sending and receiving a few emails a day, I don't understand their mathematics.

If you are someone like Alan Sugar who got rich all by yourself with your own businesses, that's different and they should pay the same tax as everyone else. More things need to be in Government / Public ownership rather than shareholders.

  • Like 2

Because the government isn't allowed to take donations. Gates pays his taxes as required by law, and I doubt he hides his personal money offshore to avoid paying them. Maybe Microsoft does something like this, but I highly doubt Gates does.

If a government does not allow to take altruistic donations, it's their own fault. In times when they need every bit of help they can get to reduce the deficit, being fussy is not something that is a wise thing to do.

They should because they get (and take) more out of the system. Think about this. The US government is essentially like a security guard for your money. It protects us from enemies traipsing in and plundering whatever we own. If I have only $5 to my name, I don't really give **** if somebody steals it. It's everything I have, but it's still only $5. But if I have $5 million, I have a lot to lose. The problem is that the government can't devote only enough resources to protect just $5,000,005. It's has to devote enough resources to protect ANY amount. So what good is charging the same flat rate for everybody? If I have $5, it's a rounding error compared to the guy with $5 million. Taxing somebody with so little money is nothing more than an token gesture to make it seem more fair to the wealthy. Let the guy with $5 keep his buck and a quarter. Maybe he'll go buy a McDouble and allow Ronald McDonald to be richer.

We can talk about making the tax system fair, but the main problem is that the economic system isn't fair to begin with. Is it fair that if one person starts with zero, it's nearly impossible for him to make $1 billion no matter how hard he works, yet if a person was gifted $1 billion by Daddy, he could easily double or triple that money? Right now it's too easy to make money by just having money. We're encouraging a society of idle rich and destitute poor with practically nobody in between.

You're right, it is very difficult to make a billion when you start with nothing. That said, whatever you make can be taken by the next generations and grown gradually. So it is a lot easier to make the tax system fairer than the economic one.

Everyone should pay the same tax rate, and that should be a percentage of what you have left after living costs have been taken out - this should be 5% max.

The government should have interests in the country to ensure that they make money and don't have to tax the people other than to support the needy.

Id rather everyone paid a standard rate of tax, but only if govts closed the loop hole on allowing companies (and registered individuals as companies) to register in tax havens and avoid paying their chosen markets tax e.g. Boots in the UK, Amazon etc etc this would recoup billions of tax annually worldwide, allowing punters to pay less tax! vodafone for example got let off with not paying ?6bn in taxes in the UK.

way I see it is, If you want to make money in a chosen country, you should have to pay that countries tax on any earnings you make.

http://www.ukuncut.org.uk/targets

Should be the same rate as everyone else, and I say hey, let them have the loopholes and shelters unless you are planning on passing laws to close them for everyone. In short, just because they are rich, doesn't mean they are criminals, or deserve to be fleeced and shook-down for more social engineering and schemes that some politician dreams up to buy more votes in their districts.

If poor people want to become rich, and don't have anyone in their family or inner circle to start them off (inheritance, etc), then it is hard work, not mandatory 'handouts' from the rich that will do it. The current and future generations need to realize this quickly, as it is starting to get out of hand.

I personally think that whether you earn ?100 or ?100,000,000 you should pay the same percentage. But pay you must.

I was reading an economists article, I forget where, he said if everybody in the UK paid just 10% - that means everybody, no loop holes or off-shore shenanigans and that goes for companies as well as people, the UK would have a massive boost in tax revenue. Taxes are high because those that would pay a lot don't pay what they should.

That being said, if the idiots in parliament spent the taxes properly we wouldn't be in half as much brown smelly stuff!

  • Like 1

I think percentages shouldn't exist, the government should send you a detailed list of the services it's giving you and a bill to pay for the shared costs, also offering an opt-out option for certain non-essential services.

I think percentages shouldn't exist, the government should send you a detailed list of the services it's giving you and a bill to pay for the shared costs, also offering an opt-out option for certain non-essential services.

Opting out means increasing the bill for others. Not an option.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Google Meet brings Gemini note-taking to AI Pro and Ultra subscribers by Karthik Mudaliar Google's Gemini-powered "Take notes for me" feature inside Google Meet is now available to Google AI Pro and Ultra subscribers. The features work on Google Meet for web as well as on mobile, and Google says that subscribers can use it for meetings they host in many supported languages. As the name suggests, "Take notes for me" allows Gemini to listen to a meeting, generate a summary, identify action items, and save the notes as a Google Doc in the user’s Drive. After the meeting, the organizer receives an email recap with the summary and action items, while the notes can also be attached to the related Calendar event depending on the meeting setup and sharing settings. The feature isn't automatically turned on for everyone, though. Google says that all meeting participants are notified when note-taking is turned on, and users can start it from the pencil icon in Meet or enable it for future calls through Meet’s meeting records settings. For work or school accounts, administrators can also control whether the feature is available and may require explicit participant consent for note-taking, recording, or transcription features. The feature first launched back in 2024, when it was available just for selected Workspace users. Over the years, Google added refinements and more options, including the ability to enable it when scheduling meetings via Google Calendar. Google's support docs say that the feature currently supports English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, and Spanish, but only one language at a time. Meetings with multiple spoken languages are not currently supported, and Google recommends using the tool for meetings between 15 minutes and eight hours. The new feature makes Google Meet closer to its rivals that have AI tools already built in. Microsoft Teams has recently started offering Copilot and intelligent recap features that summarize meetings, surface highlights, and help with follow-ups, while Zoom’s AI Companion can also generate meeting summaries from desktop and mobile meetings.
    • GnuCash 5.16 by Razvan Serea GnuCash is a personal and small business finance application, freely licensed under the GNU GPL and available for GNU/Linux, BSD, Solaris, Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. It’s designed to be easy to use, yet powerful and flexible. GnuCash allows you to track your income and expenses, reconcile bank accounts, monitor stock portfolios and manage your small business finances. It is based on professional accounting principles to ensure balanced books and accurate reports. GnuCash can keep track of your personal finances in as much detail as you prefer. If you are just starting out, use GnuCash to keep track of your checkbook. You may then decide to track cash as well as credit card purchases to better determine where your money is being spent. When you start investing, you can use GnuCash to help monitor your portfolio. Buying a vehicle or a home? GnuCash will help you plan the investment and track loan payments. If your financial records span the globe, GnuCash provides all the multiple-currency support you need. Between 5.15 and 5.16, the following bugfixes were accomplished: Bug 421610 - RFE: Include logical dates for View->Filter by "date range"The Select Range section of the Date tab of the register's Filter By dialog box is changed to provide relative, specific date, or days ago options for the start and end of the filter range. The Show number of days item label is changed to Show from days ago to better reflect what it does. Bug 436105 - esc key not working as expected in register: Enable the escape key to cancel a field edit. Bug 797384 - Gnucash doesn't handle commodity prices with big numerator/denominator properly. Bug 798004 - Next gen UI for stock transactions Bug 799314 - Add "enter now" option in scheduled transaction editor. tab to allow users to select the scheduled transactions to be included in a “Since Last Run…” window. If there are no instances of a selected transaction triggered by today’s date, the next instance is triggered. Bug 799751 - autocomplete crash Bug 799759 - Users can't Enable entries via Checkboxes on Scheduled Transactions PageAllow the Enabled box in the list of scheduled transactions to be operated instead of having to open the transaction editor dialog and change the Enabled checkbox. Also added use of the Name column as the secondary column sort for all the other columns. Bug 799762 - Poor handling of cases where hidden/placeholder accounts are used in the account register Bug 799766 - Double line preference not respected in search register Bug 799767 - POST /accounts in bindings/python/example_scripts/rest-api is broken Bug 799777 - `xaccSplitSetParent`: reparenting a committed split silently drops its KVP slots (online_id, cap-gains links) Other changes & improvements: Numeric values may now be selected to copy in the Accounts page. Add new Finance::Quote source Finnhub.io: Free API key (personal/non-professional use) available at https://finnhub.io. Set FINNHUB_API_KEY environment variable to API key to use this source. As of June 2026, free tier API limit is 60 API calls/minute. The Investment Lots report has new optional columns for Computed Annual Growth Rate. Python Bindings: Improved translation of primary object (Account, Transaction, Split, etc.) so that they can be treated as normal Python objects. This is accomplished with SWIG magic so no existing code is obsoleted. Python Bindings: Better conversion of GLists to Python lists. Python Bindings: Destroy the QofSession in the Python Session dtor to prevent leaving the database locked. [engine] Add first-class online_id accessors for Split and Account and make them available to Python bindings, removing the unused Transaction online_id property. Improve C++ implementation of QofBook. Correct the Doxygen doc for qof_instance_get/set_kvp. [gnc-log-replay.cpp] fix incorrect guid dump Add some Boost library requirements needed by libgnucash-guile to CMakeLists.txt so that missing feature will fail at configure time. Use Compile-time Regular Expressions instead of std::regex in gnc-filepath-utils.cpp and instead of boost::regex in the CSV importer, with the CTRE v3.11.1 header added to borrowed [gnc-filepath-utils.cpp] null check char* arguments Add ChartJS licenses. Removed AEX from list of commodities. euronext.com is now using JS based anti-webscraping. [report-core] always offer options summary in reports. This is useful to debug reports. The Add options summary option is removed because it's no longer optional. Remove remaining obsolete IMContext from sheet Fix blurry text in HiDPI offscreen-rendered widgets Add port field to database connection dialog: The convention of appending the port number after the host isn't obvious. When editing a split in the register treat the account as being changed only if it isn't the one selected before editing instead of if the user performed an edit Return immediately from qof_book_destroy if hash_of_collections is null. If qof_book_destroy is called on a QofBook* freshly created with qof_book_new (usually because it was used to create a session that now must be destroyed) it would try to empty the non-existent hash tables, crashing. Clean up Flathub metadata to solve warnings at flatpak build time. Be consistent in naming GncPluginPage and GncPluginPageRegister HTML: Remove unimplemented function declarations. [gnc-html.cpp] remove unused buggy string conversion functions Convert libgnc-html to C++ Apply -Wall -Werr -Wmissing-prototypes to C++ compilation on Windows and fix the resulting errors. New and Updated Translations: Arabic, Croatian, Danish, Dutch, German, Finnish, Hungarian, Korean, Norwegian-Bokmal, Spanish Download: GnuCash 5.16 | 176.0 MB (Open Source) Links: GnuCash Home page | Other Operating Systems | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Microsoft finally launches WSL Containers in public preview by David Uzondu Microsoft has announced that WSL containers, a feature that allows developers to run Linux containers natively inside Windows without the need for Docker Desktop, is now available in public preview several weeks after Microsoft previewed it at Build 2026. To use the new container feature, you first have to install the latest pre-release version of the Windows Subsystem for Linux by running a quick update command in your terminal: wsl --update --pre-release After installing, you'd get access to the new Linux container CLI (wslc.exe) and the programmable API. Microsoft said that the CLI has a "familiar format" that matches the toolsets developers already use every day. If you know standard Docker commands, your muscle memory will translate directly to wslc.exe, which even features a built-in alias called container.exe. You can quickly run a full Ubuntu KDE desktop container by exposing ports, or pass your graphics card straight into a machine learning environment to run PyTorch workloads. Passing the --gpus all flag inside the run command instantly links your hardware. Image via Microsoft As for the API, developers can now embed Linux container operations directly inside native Windows applications without exposing the command line to users. The team integrated the API directly into MSBuild and CMake, so developers can define container steps directly in project files. Apart from bringing the CLI and API into public preview, Microsoft also said that it's working on a new default file system called virtiofs to speed up file transfer rates between Windows and Linux. Microsoft also introduced an experimental networking mode named consomme, which resolves compatibility issues with corporate VPNs by routing Linux network traffic straight through Windows. One thing to note about WSL containers is that they don't run in your standard WSL distributions; instead, every application and CLI session spawns its own lightweight Hyper-V utility VM in the background. This basically reduces the chances of one app snooping on the container of another app.
    • Google reportedly limited Meta's Gemini access over limited AI compute by Karthik Mudaliar Google is reportedly limiting Meta's use of its Gemini AI models after Meta tried buying more computing capacity than even Google could supply. According to the Financial Times, Google told Meta in March that it could not provide the full Gemini capacity that Meta had requested. This shortfall even disrupted and delayed some of Meta's internal projects. Due to this, Meta even told its employees internally to use AI tokens more efficiently. Meta wasn't the only one to get hit by this sudden refusal by Google; even other customers were affected. But Meta was hit harder because of its unusually high demand for Google's models. The move from Google makes it evident that companies all over are in limited supply of both infrastructure and compute. Alphabet said in April that Google Cloud revenue grew 63% year-over-year to $20 billion in the first quarter, helped by enterprise AI infrastructure and AI solutions. In pursuit of more compute, Meta had earlier signed a multi-billion-dollar AWS agreement as well as a large AMD GPU deal for AI data centers. But the crunch would be short-lived as both Meta and Google have also ramped up infrastructure investments heavily. Meta said in November that it was committing more than $600 billion in the U.S. by 2028 for AI technology, infrastructure, and workforce expansion. In the first quarter of this year, Meta also raised its expected capital expenditure for 2026 to a range of $125 billion to $145 billion, citing higher component pricing and additional data center costs for future capacity. However, this doesn't make the company immune to the current dependence on outside suppliers. Meta has also spent many years promoting Llama as an open-weight alternative to closed models from Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. But if the reported reliance on Google's Gemini models is severe enough for internal work to get impacted, then it looks like even frontier labs and Big Tech aren't fully self-sufficient. Source: Financial Times
    • I like to reminisce about the good old days, way back in autumn 2025 when building a gaming machine was fun and the drives were about $150 when you caught a deal. Yes duh, back in the day we had it gone. Then baby Skynet came along, hiding in AI datacenters demanding more processing power until it reached singularity. End of a not totally fictional story.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      BA the Curmudgeon earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      rosiecharles earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      KMilenkoski1202 earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      533
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      269
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      150
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      98
    5. 5
      macoman
      66
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!