Here is an article that takes on Warren Buffet and Barak Obama, tax warriors extraordinaire, and their claim that Buffets secretary pays a higher tax rate than her billionaire boss...
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/09/coddling_misinformation_about_taxation.html
http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/09/coddling_misinformation_about_taxation.html
Dividends Taxation -- Double-Taxation
While it is true that the federal income tax on dividends from investments held for one year or more (and capital gains from sales of stock held for at least one year) is only 15%, this is not the whole story. Mr. Buffett and President Obama completely ignore the double-taxation aspect of corporate earnings, a key aspect of our income tax system. They purposely fail to mention that dividend income streams reach the taxpayers and the rich only after they have been already taxed once (35% to 41.6%) at the corporate level (with some exceptions with regards to REITs and certain trusts, etc.) before being distributed to their[COLOR=#009900 !important]shareholders[/COLOR]. Then the same income streams get taxed a second time(15%) when individuals actually receive the money from the corporations they own. The true and full federal tax rate on those earnings is not 15%, but anywhere from 50% to 56.6%.
Fair or Unfair?
Is it really "unfair" that shareholders are taxed only 15% the second time around, after the companies they own have already been taxed once at 35% to 41.6% on average?
Stocks grant investors part-ownership of companies. The money invested buying those stocks is 100% at risk. Share purchasers are the actual owners of those businesses, and the earnings they produce are lawfully and ethically theirs. Once those corporations pay their federal and state income taxes -- averaging from the lowest (35%) in Nevada, Wyoming, and South Dakota to the highest (41.6%) in Pennsylvania and Iowa, as reported by the nonpartisan
Tax Foundation -- the remaining earnings belong to the shareholders. That income is now their income.
However, once companies have made a profit and paid their taxes, the owners -- the investors who risked their money on purchasing these stocks -- have not yet seen a dime from the earnings of their corporations. In order for money to actually reach the shareholders, a company must pay out dividends. When those dividends are paid out, then the IRS taxes them at rate of 15% (for long-term investments held for one year or more; the regular federal rates are applied for stocks held for less than one year) for each individual who receives them. By the time stockholders get to keep any money from the earnings of the corporations they own, the government has taxed it twice and confiscated at least half of it (50% to 56.6% approximate rates). That's not enough of a "fair share" to pay?
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