Found a interesting article about the consequences on the bush tax cuts expiring:
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Employers Start Bracing for Higher Tax Withholding
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But I thought.....
Originally posted by geekgirldany View PostFound a interesting article about the consequences on the bush tax cuts expiring:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-1...-home-pay.html
I'm confused!!
The folks in payroll/HR are certainly going to have a fun ride for the next six months or so......
FE
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Thanks so much.
Originally posted by geekgirldany View PostFound a interesting article about the consequences on the bush tax cuts expiring:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-1...-home-pay.html
Peachie
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The article makes it appear that this will only affect the middle class and the rich. What the article fails to mention is that the lowest tax bracket of 10% goes to 15% January 1st. That means EVERY W-2 wage earner will have their withholding increase...not just the middle class or the rich.
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When I send my e-mail
Originally posted by Bees Knees View PostThe article makes it appear that this will only affect the middle class and the rich. What the article fails to mention is that the lowest tax bracket of 10% goes to 15% January 1st. That means EVERY W-2 wage earner will have their withholding increase...not just the middle class or the rich.
Peachie
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Other changes .....
Originally posted by Bees Knees View PostThe article makes it appear that this will only affect the middle class and the rich. What the article fails to mention is that the lowest tax bracket of 10% goes to 15% January 1st. That means EVERY W-2 wage earner will have their withholding increase...not just the middle class or the rich.
In other words, the MFJ standard deduction is not going to be twice the Single filing status.
So there will be another increase in all brackets.Jiggers, EA
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Have a look at this worksheet.
This compares the various alternatives. Basically, the Republican proposal will return everything to 2009-ish, while the Democrat's proposal will do this for low- and middle-income taxpayers. Failure of our dysfunctional Congress to do ANYTHING will, as noted, raise taxes for everyone! No doubt that will help the budget.
Another time bomb -- this time for 2010: Congress has yet to adopt a patch for the AMT. Failure to do so is going to make a lot of middle-income taxpayers very unhappy. People say, "Of course, they'll fix it." But they also said, "Of course, they won't let the inheritance tax disappear in 2010 and come back full force in 2011." With this Congress, nothing can be taken for granted!
And all of this uncertainty does wonders for tax planning! Not to mention the extra cost for the IRS to get the system adjusted once a last-minute change is made. Our tax dollars at work.Evan Appelman, EA
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Prediction
I feel that six months from now the withholding tables will be more or less where they are today, with slightly less withheld due to the higher 2011 personal exemptions.
Rough translation: I think the "Bush tax cuts" will be extended, likely (for now) to all taxpayers.
But things could get rough in the interim, and those January take home amounts may shock some people.
BTW: In the past I recall seeing very few folks that bothered with the advance EITC payments. (My current clients have no idea what EITC even is ) Has that option been stressed more in recent years?
FE
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Feduke you have not listened to POTUS
Originally posted by FEDUKE404 View PostBut the POTUS has been telling us the evil "Bush tax cuts" only help those rich folks.
I'm confused!!
The folks in payroll/HR are certainly going to have a fun ride for the next six months or so......
FE
Personally I am opposed to that. I think the tax brackets should range from 35% low to 99% high. Be grateful POTUS is POTUS and I am not. People (and I don't necessarily include any particular board member here) who loathe POTUS should reflect on how moderate he is compared to say Howard Dean or Dennis Kuccinich.Last edited by erchess; 10-29-2010, 02:50 AM.
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Originally posted by erchess View PostPersonally I am opposed to that. I think the tax brackets should range from 35% low to 99% high.
They also have riots for proposing raising the retirement age from 60 to age 62, after running out of money trying to support everyone.
The price one pays for having government try to take care of everyone is everyone expects government to take care of them.
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No low bracket
Originally posted by erchess View PostPersonally I am opposed to that. I think the tax brackets should range from 35% low to 99% high. .
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Plus it saves all that pesky business of having to make personal decisions. Life would be much easier if we just let the elites in Washington decide what we need & provide it for us rather than having to put up with all the inefficiencies & inequities of the free market."The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectful" - John Kenneth Galbraith
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Originally posted by Bees Knees View PostWe have an example of that already in Europe, where income taxes and the value added taxes (VAT) range from 70 to 80% on the top end.
They also have riots for proposing raising the retirement age from 60 to age 62, after running out of money trying to support everyone.
The price one pays for having government try to take care of everyone is everyone expects government to take care of them.
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I rarely ever saw advance EITC and glad of it. In a way I hope they don't fix the tax code and let the tax cuts expire. There would be a popular uprising of taxpayers that would make the Tea Party movement look like a Camp Fire Girls bake sale. Maybe then the newly elected congress would enact some long term tax policy along with spending reform. The USA is on an unsustainable course and the day of reckoning can't be delayed much longer.In other words, a democratic government is the only one in which those who vote for a tax can escape the obligation to pay it.
Alexis de Tocqueville
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