The Republican Recipe for Widening Inequality
When I first read the headline of this piece I thought it was going to be about a Republican plan to address the problem of inequality. But after rereading it a couple of times, along with the article, I see it's actually about the Republicans doing what they can to make inequality even wider.
I can see how it'd be a hardship to only inherit $30 million instead of $50 million. I mean how do they expect the offspring of job creators to make ends meet?
Also who gets hit by the estate tax?
http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/key-elements/estate/who.cfm
According to the above link in 2011 8,600 individuals left estates large enough to qualify for the estate tax. Of those 8,600 people only 3,270 left estates large enough to be taxed after deductions and credits were taken into account.
If that's the case that less than 5,000 indivuals (at least in 2011) actually had to pay any estate taxes then why do the Republicans, and 7 Democrats apparently, have such a hard on for getting rid of it?
I've heard the whole "family farm" and "small business" arguments but in 2011 less than 50 small farms and businesses were effected by the estate tax.
Man, I wish the Republicans would spend as much time and energy working on issues that helped the remaining 311,696,730 of us as they do for the 3,270 that ended up owing the estate tax.
Separate from the budget plans, nearly all House Republicans and seven Democrats passed a bill last week to repeal the federal estate tax on inherited wealth. Repeal would benefit the 5,500 wealthiest families in America each year and would do nothing for everyone else, because the estate tax applies only to those at the very top of the wealth ladder. For estates valued at $50 million and up, for example, repeal would save the heirs about $20 million per estate, on average, in 2016.
When I first read the headline of this piece I thought it was going to be about a Republican plan to address the problem of inequality. But after rereading it a couple of times, along with the article, I see it's actually about the Republicans doing what they can to make inequality even wider.
I can see how it'd be a hardship to only inherit $30 million instead of $50 million. I mean how do they expect the offspring of job creators to make ends meet?
Also who gets hit by the estate tax?
http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/key-elements/estate/who.cfm
According to the above link in 2011 8,600 individuals left estates large enough to qualify for the estate tax. Of those 8,600 people only 3,270 left estates large enough to be taxed after deductions and credits were taken into account.
If that's the case that less than 5,000 indivuals (at least in 2011) actually had to pay any estate taxes then why do the Republicans, and 7 Democrats apparently, have such a hard on for getting rid of it?
I've heard the whole "family farm" and "small business" arguments but in 2011 less than 50 small farms and businesses were effected by the estate tax.
Man, I wish the Republicans would spend as much time and energy working on issues that helped the remaining 311,696,730 of us as they do for the 3,270 that ended up owing the estate tax.
