• @SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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    1511 year ago

    To be a little more clear than this headline would suggest, it’s not a 4% tax on millionaires. It is a 4% tax on people making over $1M per year. That’s a pretty far cry from someone who simply owns a house, retirement fund, or a stock portfolio worth over $1M. And it’s going to education and infrastructure. I would fully support this tax if I lived in the state.

      • @rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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        231 year ago

        I wouldn’t strictly call it right wing nonsense. However, I’d definitely call it classist nonsense. Bezos owns stake in Business Insider, and is owned by Insider Inc. The CEO of Insider is Henry Blodget, who has a net worth of at least $50m and received over $300m in the sale of Insider to Axel Springer SE. The CEO of Axel Springer SE is Mathias Döpfner, with a net worth of $1.2B. The founder of Axel Springer SE is Axel Springer, who was compared to Rupert Murdoch when he was alive.

    • I know a couple dozen millionaires in Massachusetts and none of them will be leaving the state.

      4% is nothing to them. Their kids have excellent schools. They enjoy great public services. Boston.

    • @SCB@lemmy.world
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      -21 year ago

      Imagine if they expanded the tax to everyone making over median income!

      A man can dream.

      • You could probably increase it to 4.5% and have the same effect. People making above median are still working class. That also doesn’t take into account cost of living in different areas

        • @SCB@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I’m pro jacking it way the fuck up as we move through income tiers. We could just have such nice things if we raised taxes.

          Ideally I’d like to see federal incentives tied to states tying their minimum wage to local COL, and significantly higher progressively-increasing taxes on everyone from the third quintile up.

          Then just change all welfare that isn’t a training/education program to straight cash and we are cooking with gas.

          • I’d say fourth quintile but I’m personally biased and I do agree with pretty much everything you’re saying. It’s wild to me that we have a flat constant as the minimum wage and not a formula that takes into consideration your district’s cost of living. Ideally we’d have:

            Min Wage for District A = Federal Constant + k*Cost of Living in A

            It would need to be coupled with some sort of gerrymandering prevention so that districts were more representative of state areas. You’d need large cities to be their own district in this scheme.

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              I don’t think voting districts and localized COL need to be tied together, but I’d sell a kidney to fix the gerrymandering shit so yeah, still agreed.

              • It’s the best way I can think of defining an area for CoL without screwing someone over. On the state level it would be heavily skewed still. Maybe counties?

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  31 year ago

                  County is def how I would do it. They’re more localized and self-governing and can more quickly make adjustments as needed.

      • @SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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        51 year ago

        I think that a 4% hit would be a lot for people making significantly less money.

        The utility of each dollar drops the more you have. $1000 would be a massive amount of money to someone making minimum wage. $10000 in a single check might seem like a life changing amount of money for some people. At higher levels of wealth and income, those values would be far less significant. If you were to raise or reduce the salary of a typical Bay Area software developer by $1000, for instance, they probably wouldn’t even notice. And they’re not making $1M per year, either.

        The reason we have things like a progressive income is that we can tax someone making $1M per year an extra $40k - as much or more than many individuals make - and it’s not going to seriously affect their spending or saving habits. If we tax someone making $50k an extra $2k, they would feel it.

        • @SCB@lemmy.world
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          -11 year ago

          I’m aware, but Americans are also dramatically under-taxed, and as a result most of our support structures are dramatically underfunded.

          50k is below the third quintile so wouldn’t really be touched. Third quintiles starts at 61k.

          • @thecrotch@sh.itjust.works
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            31 year ago

            Americans are not under taxed, our federal government has plenty of money for whatever social programs it might want to provide. Our money is spent instead on a bloated military and pointless pet projects. How many health insurance plans could you buy for the price of one submarine or drone?

            • @SCB@lemmy.world
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              01 year ago

              Healthcare is privately bought and one of the things I’d like to shift to taxes.

              It’s so much worse than just paying more than other countries - we leave something like 30% total comp on the table. Most people would literally make more money paying health care with taxes.

              • @CaptainAniki@lemmy.flight-crew.org
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                1 year ago

                Take it a step further and outlaw profiting off the sick and the problem takes care of itself.

                The profit motive is the enemy of the people. It’s institutionalized greed and disgusting behavior that we reward.

                • @SCB@lemmy.world
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                  -11 year ago

                  “profiting off the sick” doesn’t make any sense. So we should ban doctors because they get paid? No medical device companies should exist?

                  Not sure I can support that concept.

      • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Note that we already pay 5% tax on income. This is effectively a second bracket for higher income

  • Flying Squid
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    651 year ago

    People who think all the millionaires will flee- do you really think they’ll all give up living on Martha’s Vineyard over a 4% tax?

    • cloaker
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      291 year ago

      Also, suppose some do. 4 percent tax will still generate more revenue on the remains than you will get through their creative accountants regularly

      • @meco03211@lemmy.world
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        201 year ago

        Furthermore, the ones that leave are likely the tax dodging assholes that drain the system dry while providing nothing of value. If the demand for millionaire level housing goes down, that should lower costs for all.

    • I don’t know about MA’s tax rules, but it could be based on number of days living in the state. Most wealthy people are not staying on Martha’s vineyard outside of the summer.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    141 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Massachusetts’ new 4% millionaire’s tax is giving a major boost to education and transportation initiatives in the state.

    Maura Healey last week signed a $55.98 billion state budget for the 2024 fiscal year to spend the money.

    The state’s budget “makes significant investments in schools, child care, clean energy, the environment, and access to mental and physical health care,” Healey previously said in a statement.

    The signing of the budget made Massachusetts the eighth state to adopt a plan for free school lunches since the expiration of federal free school lunches that had emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Here’s a complete breakdown of how the $1 billion revenue from the millionaire’s tax will be spent, according to the governor’s office:

    A spokeswoman for Healey’s office told Insider: “This establishes a blueprint for how this revenue will be tracked and spent in future years on priorities in education and transportation, as directed by the voters.”


    I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @FReddit@lemmy.world
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    21 year ago

    RepubliKKKlan will find a way around it.

    Inflicting suffering on the young and helpless is a RepubliKKKlan Hallmark.