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by
Howard Gleckman
on Tue 14 Oct 2008 09:46 PM EDT
TPC's Katherine Lim has crunched some numbers on John McCain's proposal to temporarily cut capital gains tax rates from 15 percent 7.5 percent. In 2009, under a plan that lowers taxes on both gains and dividends, those making $1 million or more would get two-thirds of the benefit, and an average tax cut of more than $72,000. Those making less than $50,000 would get, on average, nothing.
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by
Howard Gleckman
on Tue 14 Oct 2008 04:00 PM EDT
Both Barack Obama and John McCain have rolled out new economic stimulus plans. Each is a hodgepodge of some good ideas, some not-so-good, and some potentially awful. Obama says his new ideas would cost $60 billion. McCain says his would cost about $52 billion.
Here is a quick look at what they have in mind:
The centerpiece of Obama’s proposal is a new refundable tax credit for companies that add domestic jobs. Businesses would get $3000 for every net new full-time worker they hire. Any business would be eligible, even those that pay no taxes.
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by
Howard Gleckman
on Mon 29 Sep 2008 03:31 PM EDT
Whatever its ultimate fate, the $700 billion financial market bailout has me thinking about how events of the past few months have fundamentally changed the nature of economic risk in the U.S. And, that, in turn, raises some interesting questions about capital gains taxes.
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by
Len Burman
on Fri 26 Sep 2008 02:06 PM EDT
We had fun ridiculing the idea of suspending the gasoline tax for the summer, but the gas tax holiday was minor mischief compared with the newest idea for dealing with the financial market meltdown: a two year holiday on capital gains taxes.
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by
Howard Gleckman
on Fri 07 Dec 2007 12:31 PM EST
To the surprise of no-one, the Senate has blinked in the stand-off over whether Congress will pay for the cost of patching the Alternative Minimum Tax for another year. The question now: Will House Democrats stand firm, or will they too cave in to the big-bucks lobbying campaign of the hedge fund and private equity industry? more »
by
Howard Gleckman
on Mon 15 Oct 2007 11:53 AM EDT
There has been talk in recent days that the congressional effort to raise taxes on the earnings of private equity managers has been killed. Don’t believe it.
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