0
0

Beginning Jan. 1, 2013, there will be a new tax


 invite response                
2012 Apr 4, 10:48am   40,880 views  72 comments

by zhanka   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Beginning January 1, 2013, there will be a new tax imposed regarding income derived from a sale of real estate. The tax only applies to so-called “high income” tax payers: Singles whose adjusted gross income (AGI) is over $200,000 and married couples whose adjusted gross income is over $250,000. This new “surcharge” tax will be added to the regular taxes paid on income and will be 3.8%.
http://www.ksefocus.com/billdatabase/clientfiles/172/8/1437.pdf

#housing

Comments 1 - 40 of 72       Last »     Search these comments

1   justme   2012 Apr 4, 11:05am  

Zhanka, your description of the tax is faulty. The tax only applies to

1. Capital gains, including capital gains on real estate

2. Capital gains on real estate, only if in excess of the already established 250k+250k capital gain exemption per married couple (note: 1st residence, min holding period, etc).

3. If AGI is over 200k/250k when single/married (as you said)

Please understand that "Capital Gains" means the PROFIT on the transaction (sales price minus purchase price and expenses). This tax is NOT a tax on the transaction amount, it is a tax on the profits (gains).

By the way, the Republican propaganda machine is hard at work spreading lies about the above tax. They try their damndest to convince people that this is a VAT on housing transactions. That is NOT true.

Also keep in mind that nowadays, many people who sell real estate have capital losses and not capital gains!

By the way, this tax is part of the "Obamacare" bill (The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA)).

Reference:
http://taxfoundation.org/blog/show/26741.html

2   thomas.wong1986   2012 Apr 4, 11:24am  

justme says

Also keep in mind that nowadays, many people who sell real estate have capital losses and not capital gains!

Many homeowners like me who bought many years ago, long before the bubble will be impacted. Not everyone ~75% sold their home during the bubble. They too will be inpacted by their future sales transation. Bill shifts the burden and passes the buck to the other people who never particated in the bubble.

3   FortWayne   2012 Apr 4, 11:28am  

When the bubble crashed, expectation was that spending should come down to reality to match the economy. But it seems like the government unions can't accept that, they just rather whine and moan and tax everyone else to get what they want, they want to spend us into their fantasy land benefits and pensions.

I'm going to vote no against it, but this state has way too many socialist lefties so who knows. Either way, hope this does not pass.

4   justme   2012 Apr 4, 11:33am  

thomas.wong1986 says

justme says

Also keep in mind that nowadays, many people who sell real estate have capital losses and not capital gains!

Many homeowners like me who bought many years ago, long before the bubble will be impacted. Not everyone ~75% sold their home during the bubble. They too will be inpacted by their future sales transation. Bill shifts the burden and passes the buck to the other people who never particated in the bubble.

I think that if you have more than 250k/500k in profits it is quite okay that you have to pay this tax.

One can also think of this tax as a bit of poetic justice applied to all the old-timers that have benefitted from lower property taxes in California through the inequities of Prop. 13.

Thomas, I refuse to feel sorry for you regarding this matter.

5   SparrowBell   2012 Apr 4, 11:34am  

Justme,

Point being, why pay additional 3.8% on capital gains? Whether most people incur capital loss with real estate is beside the point. And, this apply to all investment incomes, not jus real estate. I don't know how many actually misunderstand that being levied on whole assets ... Well, if SCOTUS strikes down obmacare, maybe, the law would repeal after all.

6   justme   2012 Apr 4, 11:41am  

SparrowBell says

Point being, why pay additional 3.8% on capital gains?

Because it is the right thing to do?

7   zhanka   2012 Apr 4, 11:42am  

I just don't like who is targeted. How many married couples with children lets say in bay area with income $250,000+ feel rich? We don't, even though we considered the top 1% (although the bottom one) :( Why singles treated better than married; $200,000 for singles and only $250,000 for married?

8   justme   2012 Apr 4, 11:52am  

zhanka says

I just don't like who is targeted.

The law affects roughly the top 2% income bracket. I see little wrong in that. You disagree. Fine.

And yes, I've been known to hit that bracket from time to time, so it is not just me wanting everyone else to pay.

Everyone can make up their own minds. But to do that they must know the FACTS of what the law does. That is the most important matter to me.

9   justme   2012 Apr 4, 12:00pm  

Here is some documentation about Republi-cons lying about the tax:

http://www.factcheck.org/2010/04/a-38-percent-sales-tax-on-your-home/

10   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Apr 4, 3:55pm  

If you have more than 250k in profits in an existing house, you should be forced to marry someone that is 250k underwater. Then when you do your join taxes it'll all flush out. We could call this new matchmaking site www.overandunderwatermatch.com. Obviously, if you are already married then you would have to do the ceremony up in Utah and have it performed by Jacob himself, away from the watchful eye of the feds. :)

11   StoutFiles   2012 Apr 4, 10:22pm  

zhanka says

I just don't like who is targeted. How many married couples with children lets say in bay area with income $250,000+ feel rich? We don't, even though we considered the top 1% (although the bottom one) :( Why singles treated better than married; $200,000 for singles and only $250,000 for married?

Boo hoo! You probably don't feel rich because you choose to live in one of the most overpriced areas in the country. That's your decision though; it doesn't change the fact that you're technically rich.

This country is going broke and the middle class has been carrying the load the whole time. It's about time the upper class starts helping out.

12   SiO2   2012 Apr 5, 12:31am  

thomas.wong1986 says

Many homeowners like me who bought many years ago, long before the bubble will be impacted.

Thomas, just wait until prices go back to 1992 levels or lower (as is often predicted), then you won't have to pay the tax.

13   FortWayne   2012 Apr 5, 12:53am  

Does this only affect real estate or any kind of income?

14   zhanka   2012 Apr 5, 1:01am  

The health care law contains a new 3.8 percent tax on "unearned income" for high-income taxpayers. Wikipedia: "According to certain conceptions of the Labor Theory of Value, it may refer to all income that is not a direct result of labor."

15   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Apr 5, 1:44am  

SiO2 says

thomas.wong1986 says

Many homeowners like me who bought many years ago, long before the bubble will be impacted.

Thomas, just wait until prices go back to 1992 levels or lower (as is often predicted), then you won't have to pay the tax.

Yup, problem solved. That goes to show if you find yourself complaining about paying taxes on your gains, things are not that bad for you. Gain=good, Loss=Bad

16   dublin hillz   2012 Apr 5, 2:05am  

zhanka says

I just don't like who is targeted. How many married couples with children lets say in bay area with income $250,000+ feel rich? We don't, even though we considered the top 1% (although the bottom one) :( Why singles treated better than married; $200,000 for singles and only $250,000 for married?

Prostoye obyasneniye (simple explanation) - single person faces higher monthly fixed costs - rent/mortgage, all utilities, some insurance, thus they have less discretionary income left. When it comes to big ticket items, including travel, you get a 50% discount basically when you are married, so I don't see anything inherently unjust about $200Gs/$250Gs single/married tax policy.

17   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Apr 5, 2:24am  

dublin hillz says

zhanka says

I just don't like who is targeted. How many married couples with children lets say in bay area with income $250,000+ feel rich? We don't, even though we considered the top 1% (although the bottom one) :( Why singles treated better than married; $200,000 for singles and only $250,000 for married?

Prostoye obyasneniye (simple explanation) - single person faces higher monthly fixed costs - rent/mortgage, all utilities, some insurance, thus they have less discretionary income left. When it comes to big ticket items, including travel, you get a 50% discount basically when you are married, so I don't see anything inherently unjust about $200Gs/$250Gs single/married tax policy.

I guess you don't know my wife. She came with a 4X multiplier to my spending habits. A 2X would be an improvement, let along a 1.5 like you reference. ;)

18   ForcedTQ   2012 Apr 5, 2:25am  

dublin hillz says

zhanka says

I just don't like who is targeted. How many married couples with children lets say in bay area with income $250,000+ feel rich? We don't, even though we considered the top 1% (although the bottom one) :( Why singles treated better than married; $200,000 for singles and only $250,000 for married?

Prostoye obyasneniye (simple explanation) - single person faces higher monthly fixed costs - rent/mortgage, all utilities, some insurance, thus they have less discretionary income left. When it comes to big ticket items, including travel, you get a 50% discount basically when you are married, so I don't see anything inherently unjust about $200Gs/$250Gs single/married tax policy.

There should be NO tax structure in place that treats anyone person differently due to marriage status. The fact that the single person can reduce those "higher monthly fixed costs" by having others live with them in a room mate situation shows that if they are smart, they can divide those costs just as easily as a married couple. "travel" is not a living requirement. Again, there should be NO TAX that is applied differently to persons of varying marital status. Plain and Simple.

19   zhanka   2012 Apr 5, 2:36am  

dublin hillz says

including travel, you get a 50% discount basically when you are married

Do you have kids? "50% discount"? Hmm... maybe for hotel, what about air tickets lets say for 4, dining out...?

What about cost of education? UC system charges $30,000+ per year, private school twice as much

20   clambo   2012 Apr 5, 3:10am  

There are lots of new taxes coming. If you vote AGAIN for Obama you deserve to be broke forever and should be sterilized after your lobotomy.

21   justme   2012 Apr 5, 3:38am  

FortWayne says

Does this only affect real estate or any kind of income?

Ignorance is the hallmark of right-wingers. Read my first comment again, and try to engage the brain.

I'll give you a hint: The tax applies to CAPITAL GAINS, not earned income (wages).

If you do not know what a capital gain is, you have no business at all opining about tax policy (as you did earlier in this thread). You need a remedial course, start looking it up in Wikipedia.

22   clambo   2012 Apr 5, 4:04am  

Obamacare also imposes a special tax on medical devices and pharmaceuticals.
Of course these new taxes are all going to be wonderful for these industries and will help them compete worldwide better than ever before.
I mean, how can poor Swiss drug companies ever compete? They have no such special tax and they have an 8.5% corporate tax (V. USA 35%).
justme you have only 3,130 posts. You need to get your numbers up, eventually you'll convince all of us of your brilliance.

23   justme   2012 Apr 5, 4:18am  

clambo says

Obamacare also imposes a special tax on medical devices and pharmaceuticals.
Of course these new taxes are all going to be wonderful for these industries and will help them compete worldwide better than ever before.
I mean, how can poor Swiss drug companies ever compete? They have no such special tax and they have an 8.5% corporate tax (V. USA 35%).
justme you have only 3,130 posts. You need to get your numbers up, eventually you'll convince all of us of your brilliance.

Clambo,

Big FAIL to you. You cannot make a coherent argument relevant to the subject matter of this thread, so you go fishing for something else (corporate tax rates in Switzerland versus US??) to squabble about.

If you want to discuss that, start your own thread.

24   zhanka   2012 Apr 5, 9:49am  

justme says

The law affects roughly the top 2% income bracket. I see little wrong in that. You disagree. Fine.

The new law potentially applies to almost every one of tens households in San Jose - San Francisco-Oakland-Vallejo. So, how you feel about that now?

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/01/15/business/one-percent-map.html

A household income of $250,000 places you in the Top 3% of people who live in the United States.
INCOME REQUIRED TO BE IN THE:
TOP 1% $383,001
TOP 5% $188,001
TOP 10% $140,001
TOP 25% $89,125
TOP HALF $50,742
BOTTOM 25% $25,411
BOTTOM 10% $12,154

A household income of $250,000 places you in the Top 10% of people who live San Francisco-Oakland-Vallejo, Calif..
INCOME REQUIRED TO BE IN THE:
TOP 1% $558,046
TOP 5% 349,693
TOP 10% 238,855
TOP 25% 141,790
TOP HALF 78,086
BOTTOM 25% 37,500
BOTTOM 10% 15,246

A household income of $250,000 places you in the Top 8% of people who live there San Jose, Calif..
INCOME REQUIRED TO BE IN THE:
TOP 1% $517,000
TOP 5% 298,164
TOP 10% 225,852
TOP 25% 146,348
TOP HALF 85,784
BOTTOM 25% 42,892
BOTTOM 10% 19,820

25   RentingForHalfTheCost   2012 Apr 5, 10:12am  

zhanka says

The new law potentially applies to almost every one of tens households in San Jose - San Francisco-Oakland-Vallejo. So, how you feel about that now?

Tax the crap our of then all. Tax the crap out of me. We are living on borrowed money. We need new borrowed money to pay back the liabilities on the last set of bond auctions. Rinse, repeat. All the while we boast about the wealth of this country. Let stop the shell game and tax us all enough to get back to a baseline. No one got the balls to do what is needed, so we are all setup to continue to fall into the abyss together. I'd vote for a double of all existing taxes. Turbo tax says you owe X amount, then you really owe 2X. Didn't even make 2X last year, tough, leave. There are many foreigners that would love your passport.

26   justme   2012 Apr 5, 10:33am  

zhanka says

The new law potentially applies to almost every one of tens households in San Jose - San Francisco-Oakland-Vallejo. So, how you feel about that now?

I feel like this: Stop whining and pay your damn taxes.

27   Mick Russom   2012 Apr 5, 12:10pm  

Nomograph says

So why do they stay? The same reason that Pharma, Biotech, and high-tech stays in expensive areas such as San Diego, San Francisco, and Boston; the most important factor in success is the ability to recruit and retain the best possible talent. Switzerland has excellent universities such as ETH that provide the skilled workforce they need.

That was true. The sad thing here is that if you are not part of the landed gentry, you cant afford to live in these places anymore. You are a wage slave at the table looking for scraps.

Also, have you noticed, only the kids of the 1% come out of schools debt free, and the rest, saddled with debt, but again, the top schools in these top areas take in wealthy kids pretty much exclusively.

We've ended up with rich people's rich kids go to top schools and graduate and take over companies with their highfalutin credentials and live in posh areas completing the cycle.

What isnt true anymore is this isnt really competitive. And if you think you are so great and so smart you cant be outsourced, just wait. Youll see. The 0.01% who are really in control have something planned for you, and its not pretty.

And most of the best possible talent is wasted. Big companies are mostly antagonistic against innovation. The whole thing is screwed up, and if you've been in the valley for the last 10 years and think things are getting better for innovation or work life or anything you are nuts. Its a crisis.

This isnt going to last. Crowding into these ridiculous cities jammed in traffic. Then we sign over all the fruits of our knowledge to the corporations seen as "people" in the eyes of the law. We do all of the work. Pay all of the taxes. And we do this because we are afraid of sinking into the lower classes. Its all fear. Nothing is about self actualization or innovation. Its about enriching corporations and their preferred owners.

"Forget the politicians. The politicians are put there to give you the idea that you have freedom of choice . . . you don’t. You have no choice. You have owners. They own you. They own everything. They own all the important land. They own, and control the corporations. They’ve long since bought, and paid for the Senate, the Congress, the state houses, the city halls, they got the judges in their back pockets and they own all the big media companies, so they control just about all of the news and information you get to hear. They got you by the balls. They spend billions of dollars every year lobbying . . . lobbying, to get what they want . . . Well, we know what they want. They want more for themselves and less for everybody else, but I’ll tell you what they don’t want . . . they don’t want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don’t want well informed, well educated people capable of critical thinking. They’re not interested in that . . . that doesn’t help them. That’s against their interests. That’s right. They don’t want people who are smart enough to sit around a kitchen table and think about how badly they’re getting screwed by a system that threw them overboard 30 years ago. They don’t want that. You know what they want? They want obedient workers . . . Obedient workers, people who are just smart enough to run the machines and do the paperwork. And just dumb enough to passively accept all these increasingly crappier jobs with the lower pay, the longer hours, the reduced benefits, the end of overtime and vanishing pension that disappears the minute you go to collect it, and now they’re coming for your Social Security money. They want your retirement money. They want it back so they can give it to their criminal friends on Wall Street, and you know something? They’ll get it . . . they’ll get it all from you sooner or later cause they own this place. It’s a big club and you ain't in it. You and I are not in The big club. By the way, it’s the same big club they use to beat you over the head with all day long when they tell you what to believe. All day long beating you over the head with their media telling you what to believe, what to think and what to buy. The table has tilted folks. The game is rigged and nobody seems to notice. Nobody seems to care. Good honest hard-working people . . . white collar, blue collar it doesn’t matter what color shirt you have on. Good honest hard-working people continue, these are people of modest means . . . continue to elect these rich cocksuckers who don’t give a crap about you. They don’t give a crap about you . . . they don’t give a crap about you. They don’t care about you at all . . . at all . . . at all, and nobody seems to notice. Nobody seems to care. That’s what the owners count on. The fact that Americans will probably remain willfully ignorant of the big red, white and blue dick that’s being jammed up their butt everyday, because the owners of this country know the truth. It’s called the American Dream cause you have to be asleep to believe it . . .”

28   zhanka   2012 Apr 5, 3:29pm  

justme says

zhanka says

The new law potentially applies to almost every one of tens households in San Jose - San Francisco-Oakland-Vallejo. So, how you feel about that now?

I feel like this: Stop whining and pay your damn taxes.

I wasn't whining, the people like you who feel they are entitled to others peoples hard earned money are. By the way, if you're not noticing the problem we are having not is how much we tax individual income (unearned or earned) but rather:

1) Big Government
2) Big Banks
3) Big Corporations - 30 Major Corporations Paid No Income Taxes In The Last Three Years, While Making $160 Billion
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2011/11/03/360185/30-corporations-no-taxes/?mobile=nc
Mick Russom says

And most of the best possible talent is wasted. Big companies are mostly antagonistic against innovation. The whole thing is screwed up, and if you've been in the valley for the last 10 years and think things are getting better for innovation or work life or anything you are nuts. Its a crisis.

I agree

4) Real Unemployment Rate http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/unemployment-charts
5) Manufacturing in 3rd world countries
6) Education - already unaffordable for middle class without getting themselves in to more debt

etc etc etc

29   SparrowBell   2012 Apr 5, 4:07pm  

Nomograph says

BTW, Swiss pharma faces the absolute HIGHEST labor costs for their R&D force, and it's extraordinarily expensive to do business there. Everything costs more.

So why do they stay? The same reason that Pharma, Biotech, and high-tech stays in expensive areas such as San Diego, San Francisco, and Boston; the most important factor in success is the ability to recruit and retain the best possible talent. Switzerland has excellent universities such as ETH that provide the skilled workforce they need.

You'd have a real hard time doing anything in Kentucky aside from building Creation Museums.

I don't know if you work in pharma but I do and Swiss pharma before. Ever since president obama was elected, upper management talked about scaling down US headquarter and moving some to Asia due to the anti-business (maybe only oil and pharma) practise. Why do you think two big Swiss pharma are in Basel? Because the canton tax is low there. You probably haven't seen the headline in Swiss local news that Daniel vasella was threatening to move the headquarter outside Basel when higher tax was proposed. With strong Swiss franc hurting their profits, don't over-estimate their tolerance for tax.

Btw, Novartis once evaluated both San Francisco and Cambridge for their research centre but ended up choosing Boston. Do you think high California tax is not the reason? And, when Novartis bought Chiron at emeryville, they offer to relocate people to east coast. Big stable companies (maybe except high tech) do not pick a place where people like to live. New jersey, a big hub for pharma, is pretty boring, for e.g. Bay area itself is a bubble, unfortunately, my husband is in it.....

30   SparrowBell   2012 Apr 5, 4:37pm  

justme says

SparrowBell says

Point being, why pay additional 3.8% on capital gains?

Because it is the right thing to do?

Who define right or wrong? As far as i am concerned, I haven't seen my tax money well-spent.

US healthcare has cost problem. Nobody wants to deny people with preexisting conditions healthcare, but last I remember when I had surgery, when it was time to remove the splinter: first nurse came to check my vitals, second came to cut the bandage, third came to remove the stitches, then the doctor came. Until they cut down all those unnecessary stuff, I am not sure if I am shelling more money on that. Treating the symptoms (healthcare malfunction here) may make some feel good about their heroic actions but I don't know if it solves the problem. Well, the memory that many friends in Massachusetts braced the cold to vote for unknown Scott brown as senator to stop healthcare being passed is still vivid, yet congress managed to pass it with some gimmicks. So, you can't expect this to be well-loved law.

31   SparrowBell   2012 Apr 5, 4:50pm  

zhanka says

I just don't like who is targeted. How many married couples with children lets say in bay area with income $250,000+ feel rich? We don't, even though we considered the top 1% (although the bottom one) :( Why singles treated better than married; $200,000 for singles and only $250,000 for married?

A friend said 350k is a poverty line in bay area, the ironic top 1%. In a drastic action to reduce the tax, she is considering separation. According to her, she could have saved additional >50k (combined income of 400k) a year.

32   SparrowBell   2012 Apr 5, 5:03pm  

justme says

FortWayne says

Does this only affect real estate or any kind of income?

Ignorance is the hallmark of right-wingers. Read my first comment again, and try to engage the brain.

I can't resist but to comment on this. If ignorance is the hallmark of right-wingers, then I would say arrogance would be the equivalent to apply on left-wingers. Thought there is a saying that arrogant people tend to arrive the wrong conclusion with 100% confidence. And, ignorance could be a bliss too. So, I guess i rather be ignorant than arrogant.

33   clambo   2012 Apr 5, 5:23pm  

justme: who made you moderator? There are numerous new and exciting taxes in Obamacare that are not just limited to selling houses.
"Just pay your taxes"? How about: Just keep your hands out of my pocket and off my wallet.
RE: Switzerland is expensive. This is just because the Swiss are financially astute enough so that their CURRENCY isn't falling, while everyone else's is falling relative to Swiss Francs.
I remember when I visited Switzerland, it was fantastic, and 1 US dollar=3 Swiss Francs.
Well, today it's I.25 US dollar=1 Swiss Franc.
Of course, the problem today in Switzerland is that they are almost so financially superior to everyone else that their stong currency is too strong and may hurt their exports and other business that trade.
No capital gains taxes, every guy has his own SIG assault rifle to keep, banks that keep your accounts private if you didn't steal it, the right to die if you are a terminal patient with no hope, and low taxes.
In many ways, Switzerland is freer than the USA and definitely has a superior currency.

If taxes doesn't affect business, why are they moving from California to Texas?

34   justme   2012 Apr 5, 5:43pm  

Mick,

That last long paragraph is by George Carlin, truth be told.

Good job on the original stuff, though!

35   justme   2012 Apr 5, 6:16pm  

SparrowBell says

I can't resist but to comment on this. If ignorance is the hallmark of right-wingers, then I would say arrogance would be the equivalent to apply on left-wingers.

I don't think pointing out the ignorance and lies of the right wing counts as arrogance.

The right wing does however like to claim that other people are arrogant in order to silence them. That that does not work on me.

36   thomas.wong1986   2012 Apr 6, 1:07pm  

RentingForHalfTheCost says

SiO2 says

thomas.wong1986 says

Many homeowners like me who bought many years ago, long before the bubble will be impacted.

Thomas, just wait until prices go back to 1992 levels or lower (as is often predicted), then you won't have to pay the tax.

Yup, problem solved. That goes to show if you find yourself complaining about paying taxes on your gains, things are not that bad for you. Gain=good, Loss=Bad

Prices back to 1992 adjusted for inflation NO problem since that would be the normal long term appreciatied value..

and just falling back to some rational time would be more wiser and healthier for the BA economy... I, like many, will look forward to keeping our jobs here...

37   thomas.wong1986   2012 Apr 6, 1:44pm  

Nomograph says

The industry here is GROWING.

15 out of 290 jobs listed are in SD the rest are elsewhere in US.
Not that of a biggie..

https://jobs.pfizer.com

United States-Connecticut-Groton
United States-Massachusetts-Andover
United States-Massachusetts-Cambridge
United States-Michigan-Kalamazoo
United States-Missouri-Chesterfield
United States-Missouri-Hannibal
United States-Missouri-Saint Louis
United States-New Jersey-Madison
United States-New Jersey-Peapack
United States-New York-New York
United States-North Carolina-Durham
United States-Tennessee-Memphis
United States-Virginia-Richmond

38   thomas.wong1986   2012 Apr 6, 1:52pm  

Nomograph says

Novartis also has lots of positions open right now in their San Diego center, most of which pay well into six figures.

Still putting up a bunch a BS on Biotech Pharma... Like so many Realtors you like to justify SD Prices due to some high fabled salaries.

The reality is like any other business the divisional and dept managers at Novartis have a limited budget they can spend on.. and they dont just hand out six figure salaries like lottery tickets. And with any Bio Pharma cos. the budget on long term projects that can last 10-15 years until full FDA approval, they are very mindfull not to burn that cash too quickly.

39   housingcasino4865   2012 Apr 6, 4:46pm  

The sheeple just don't get it. This will drive house prices up. Who will pay the tax? Indirectly: home buyers. And through inflation, eventually everyone will pay.

Keep in mind, the 3.8% tax is on passive income (hint: rental income, hint, hint). Therefore, do expect rents to go up accordingly. The sheeple just don't get it... "tax the rich, tax the rich...!" The taxes trickle down, always.

40   Meccos   2012 Apr 10, 9:13am  

StoutFiles says

zhanka says

I just don't like who is targeted. How many married couples with children lets say in bay area with income $250,000+ feel rich? We don't, even though we considered the top 1% (although the bottom one) :( Why singles treated better than married; $200,000 for singles and only $250,000 for married?

Boo hoo! You probably don't feel rich because you choose to live in one of the most overpriced areas in the country. That's your decision though; it doesn't change the fact that you're technically rich.

This country is going broke and the middle class has been carrying the load the whole time. It's about time the upper class starts helping out.

this is such an ignorant comment. BOohoo for you for not making as much. why do you feel justified in making others pay just because they have more money than you????

Talk about class warfare..

Comments 1 - 40 of 72       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions   gaiste