« First « Previous Comments 35 - 74 of 113 Next » Last » Search these comments
And tack on the $2k credit per child.
anon_e0eaf saysAnd tack on the $2k credit per child.
Yah that’s a pretty nice bump for working families! It’s about time they started recognizing the work and sacrifice it requires to raise children in this economy and awarded a little financial incentive to do so! The only alternative to Americans having children is importing more third world people to do that for us.
Libbies take note. :
In 1932, in the depths of the Great Depression, Franklin D. Roosevelt called for “bold, persistent experimentation” and said: “It is common sense to take a method and try it; if it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something.”
In 1932, in the depths of the Great Depression, Franklin D. Roosevelt called for “bold, persistent experimentation” and said: “It is common sense to take a method and try it; if it fails, admit it frankly and try another. But above all, try something.”
errc saysCrony Capitalism ftw
One of your less coherent posts. And that’s bad company lately.
Winners: Owners of private jets. People with estates > $11MM, people with large holdings in stocks
Losers: Everyone else.
People with estates > $11MM, people with large holdings in stocks
Of course. But removal of the exemptions hurts them. Removal of student loan interest hurts them.
I'm talking in totality(and in general)--winners are the super rich. Losers are everyone else.
HappyGilmore saysOf course. But removal of the exemptions hurts them. Removal of student loan interest hurts them.
I'm talking in totality(and in general)--winners are the super rich. Losers are everyone else.
Those are good moves IMO. The Department of Education just released data that showed that the student loan default rate from October 2013 to October 2017 has increased to 11.5 percent (roughly 600,000 defaulters). This is unacceptable. Those losses are tax payer subsidized. No one is forcing those people to take loans and taking incentives AWAY from bad borrowers is a good thing IMO.
Still, I've done the math and the 24k deduction is huge for people who aren't over borrowing. not to mention the lower tax brackets per income level overall. Also this is the largest drop to small business and corporations in 20 years (more business expansion and jobs c...
Access to education should not be only available to the wealthy. That's bad policy for the US--an educated population is vastly superior to an uneducated population.
Nope--I've done the calculations too. Huge net negative. Much better off simply sending all taxpayers $10K.
As an American Capitalist, i see a very simple solution: bring back Capitalism so that student loan debt is discharged in chapter 7 bankruptcy. The market will sort it out
errc saysAs an American Capitalist, i see a very simple solution: bring back Capitalism so that student loan debt is discharged in chapter 7 bankruptcy. The market will sort it out
As an american capitalist, then you should also be in favor of loaning money based on projected ability to pay back? Right Mr. Capitalist?
Access to education should not be only available to the wealthy. That's bad policy for the US--an educated population is vastly superior to an uneducated population.
Instead of shoveling more of our tax dollars into education loans, we should be working with universities to come up with ways of reducing the cost of tuition. There is absolutely no reason why a 4 year degree should cost hundreds of thousands of dollars saddling our kids with a big fat mortgage right out of college.
Still, I've done the math and the 24k deduction is huge for people who aren't over borrowing. not to mention the lower tax brackets per income level overall. Also this is the largest drop to small business and corporations in 20 years (more business expansion and jobs coming).
HappyGilmore saysWinners: Owners of private jets. People with estates > $11MM, people with large holdings in stocks
Losers: Everyone else.
That doesn't seem accurate. You don't think a 24k standard deduction helps a middle class family?
If I had an uncivil button, I would have used it on this comment. I'd expect better from a moderator.
So show us the math. How did you do the math when the bill isn't out of committee yet and there are two versions with some big differences?
Yep--I agree with that. Education is similar to healthcare, however, in that it has a very inelastic demand curve. People need education.
Still, I've done the math and the 24k deduction is huge for people who aren't over borrowing.
HappyGilmore saysAccess to education should not be only available to the wealthy.
It's not, if you have a pulse and are breathing, you can sign on the dotted line and get money for college, regardless if you can pay it back.
Sniper saysHappyGilmore saysAccess to education should not be only available to the wealthy.
It's not, if you have a pulse and are breathing, you can sign on the dotted line and get money for college, regardless if you can pay it back.
I’ve posted frequently...in California, the state colleges...some of which are very good schools...are about $6-7k annually inclusive of books, parking, and student fees. Junior colleges are around $1100-1500 annually inclusive. So at 4 years you are looking at $20k...less than the price of an average new car and certainly an affordable loan to ANYONE who has a job.
College being affordable to only the rich is a lie and I’m not sure why “happy gillmore” continues to dish out blatantly false statements.
College being affordable to only the rich is a lie and I’m not sure why “happy gillmore” continues to dish out blatantly false statements.
Fucking White Male saysCollege being affordable to only the rich is a lie and I’m not sure why “happy gillmore” continues to dish out blatantly false statements.
Not everyone lives in CA. I don't know if $7K annually is correct or not, but that is still cost prohibitive to someone working minimum wage.
And you can't even smell college for $7K/year in the vast majority of places.
You obviously aren't following the thread. Goran proposed eliminating college loans.
Those are good moves IMO. The Department of Education just released data that showed that the student loan default rate from October 2013 to October 2017 has increased to 11.5 percent (roughly 600,000 defaulters). This is unacceptable. Those losses are tax payer subsidized. No one is forcing those people to take loans and taking incentives AWAY from bad borrowers is a good thing IMO.
Again not true. Just about Every state has a state college system as well as a university system.
Min wage is irrelevant. Were talking loans here which everyone will qualify for. And if you are min wage after graduating...sucks to be you.
Fucking White Male saysAgain not true. Just about Every state has a state college system as well as a university system.
Yes, it is true. They have systems, but they sure as hell don't cost $7K/year.
Yes, allowing folks who couldn't afford higher education without loans does increase demand, but limiting access to education is a horrible way to control costs.
Post link then. A few to make sure you’re not pointing out the rare exception.
And by inflationary pressure you mean--allowing people who couldn't otherwise afford higher education to obtain it.
Let's be clear in what you are saying.
Again, so we're clear. You advocate that ones' career opportunities are substantially based on the birth lottery. That is not unusual for Republicans.
I advocate for a merit based system where the best and brightest have the opportunity to get ahead even if they are born into a poor family.
I advocate for a merit based system where the best and brightest have the opportunity to get ahead even if they are born into a poor family.
The cynic in me thinks the Democrats want more poor immigrants and poor kids from broken families for votes and power.
There you go, median cost in the US is like $9,900 a year. Where's all these big costs.
« First « Previous Comments 35 - 74 of 113 Next » Last » Search these comments
Hopefully the house passes this thing with minimal changes since the property tax deduction survived. The house bill was horrible for upper middle class earners in blue states. This softens the blow. There’s about a $3000 difference now between the senate and house bills for us.
It’s still stupid all these tax changes and it’s basically a wash for our family all said and done. Just glad we didn’t stretch and buy a really expensive house.... those people in our income level are getting screwed if they can’t combine those interest payments with SALT for a fat deduction.