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Strategies & Market Trends : Trend Setters and Range Riders -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Susan G who wrote (23081)9/24/2002 6:42:20 AM
From: lee kramer  Respond to of 26752
 
Susan: I have little doubt Flyboy Bob will enjoy the article. However, the first word was "INVESTORS"...yes in caps. What do investors know. Investors are traders who rode 'em all, all the way down and likely averaged (ugh!) down too.



To: Susan G who wrote (23081)9/24/2002 12:20:28 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 26752
 
And just wait for the middle class to disappear from the RICH BOYZ TAX CUTS......READ THIS
September 22, 2002
John Balzar:
Bush Tax 'Cuts': a Dirty Deal for the Middle
Class Millions will be forced to pay higher "alternative" rates.

Ready for an unpleasant shock? Try this quiz:

* George W. Bush's well-known pro-family,
pro-marriage views are reflected in his most
important domestic initiative. True or false?

* Bush's 10-year "across-the-board" income tax
reduction--now the law of the land--will benefit
wealthy taxpayers most, but all taxpayers will get
their fair share because it's their money, not the
government's. True or false?

* While the tax cuts won't simplify the annual
misery of filling out IRS forms, matters aren't going
to get worse either. True or false?

For middle-class and upper-middle-class
taxpayers, the answer to all three: false.

Stand by, America. Families that earn $75,000 to
$500,000--those income tax payers who shoulder
half the burden of total income tax payments--are
about to get a surprise kick in the wallet. If you've
closely followed the details of the president's 2001 phased-in tax cut, you are
vaguely aware this nightmare is coming. But now a study by the respected Tax
Policy Center has spelled out the gory details.

The aggravating marriage penalty in our tax law is about to get worse. The
well-established and justified favoritism that our tax law shows for families with
children is about to be radically rolled back for middle-class and
upper-middle-class Americans. As for the supposed benefits of this
across-the-board tax rate reduction? Well, the middle classes will end up with
pennies on each dollar promised before it's over, and less each year. And if
you think filling out your tax form is complicated now, it's going to be doubly
difficult in the years to come.

The overall result will be a significant shift in tax burden from the wealthy to
those in the middle classes. Consider two groups of taxpayers: Those earning
$100,000 to $200,000 now account for 22% of total federal income taxes
owed to the government. That's the same percentage shouldered by those
earning more than $1 million. By 2010, however, the share paid by
million-dollar-earners will drop to 18%, while the lower-earning group's share
will rise to 27%.

"Hammering the middle class doesn't make any sense to me," says Leonard E.
Burman, a coauthor of the study and director of the Tax Policy Center, a joint
venture of two heavyweight Washington organizations--the Brookings
Institution and the Urban Institute.

It makes no sense to me either. Except by the law of unintended consequences.
A generation ago, in answer to a public outcry, Congress approved something
called the alternative minimum tax. It was a scheme to snag a few rich
people--precisely 155 of them in 1969--who took advantage of exemptions
and loopholes to avoid paying any income tax. The trouble is, what was
considered wealthy in 1969 is now more or less just a good income. As the
Tax Policy Center put it, this once-targeted "class tax" is about to become a
"mass tax."

The dirty secret of Bush's tax cut is that while ordinary income tax rates were
reduced across the board, the rates and terms of the alternative minimum tax
went unchanged. Taxpayers in the middle classes looked at the new, lowered
rates promised under Bush's package and anticipated their benefits. But many
of them did not realize they would answer instead to this different tax formula.

Last year, barely 2% of the nation paid these alternative rates. By 2010, they
will apply to a majority of people earning between $50,000 and $100,000 and
95% of those who earn between $100,000 and $500,000, according to the
tax center's study.

How is the AMT calculated? You'll have to ask your accountant. Don't have
one? You will. The alternative minimum tax will require millions of Americans to
compute their federal taxes twice--first under the regular schedule and then a
second time at a tax rate of either 26% or 28% of income without benefit of
personal exemptions, meaning exemptions for children, or standard and
itemized deductions for such things as state taxes. You'll have to pay the
greater amount.

Because the alternative tax will grab taxpayers incrementally, according to
individual circumstances and the gradual phase-in of Bush's tax cuts, the outcry
has been muted so far. But don't expect it to stay that way. By 2010, this
higher alternative tax will bring in $141 billion to Washington.

The Tax Policy Center's appalling findings are the best reason yet to reopen
debate on Bush's tax cuts, and now--before the alternative tax becomes the
mainstream tax.

Yes, whether the nation can afford a sweeping reduction in revenues during
wartime remains a burning question, but there should be no question that it's
wrong to penalize marriage and families, to shift a greater burden of
government finance to the middle classes and to make tax day an even more
complicated ordeal.
Speaking of WATCHING YOU BOTTOM!
The TOP is NOT watching out for the middle and lower classes....you know....MOST OF US?
CC



To: Susan G who wrote (23081)9/30/2002 7:28:54 AM
From: Bob Biersack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 26752
 
Hi Susan ...Just returned from a trip to Canada...we had a wonderful time.....sure didn't miss the market...hope U made $$$$ on the down market..

P.S. Did a lot of "Bottom Pleasures"