Originally posted by: DLeRium
I read the AFL-CIO's letter to the University of California urging pay cuts for people making over $200,000. Despite the UC claims that professors are making 25% under market rates, teh AFL-CIO wants to cut pay by at least 20% starting from 200,000, and going up into the 30%s for people making over 300k. It's disgusting. Proposed savings was like $200 million. So your solution to the CA budget crisis is to take our best professors away and have them work for better paying schools?
Originally posted by: JS80
Originally posted by: DLeRium
I read the AFL-CIO's letter to the University of California urging pay cuts for people making over $200,000. Despite the UC claims that professors are making 25% under market rates, teh AFL-CIO wants to cut pay by at least 20% starting from 200,000, and going up into the 30%s for people making over 300k. It's disgusting. Proposed savings was like $200 million. So your solution to the CA budget crisis is to take our best professors away and have them work for better paying schools?
Uh, what professors make > $200k. I thought the avg prof (non medicine practicing) at top colleges makes like $150k.
Originally posted by: Patranus
-snip-The nation?s largest labor union and some allied Democrats are pushing a new tax that would hit big investment firms such as Goldman Sachs reaping billions of dollars in profits while the rest of the economy sputters.
The AFL-CIO, one of the Democratic Party?s most powerful allies, would like to assess a small tax ? about a tenth of a percent ? on every stock transaction.
Originally posted by: b0mbrman
Originally posted by: DLeRium
I read the AFL-CIO's letter to the University of California urging pay cuts for people making over $200,000. Despite the UC claims that professors are making 25% under market rates, teh AFL-CIO wants to cut pay by at least 20% starting from 200,000, and going up into the 30%s for people making over 300k. It's disgusting. Proposed savings was like $200 million. So your solution to the CA budget crisis is to take our best professors away and have them work for better paying schools?
That's a terrible idea. Do you have a link to the letter?
As you know, we recently reached settlements with AFSCME that will see AFSCME members paid over $91 million in raises over the next three years. Raises are a true rarity in this economic climate. By your own statements, the agreement was "historic." Market surveys document that your members are compensated above market by as much as 20 percent. Other employee categories, such as our chancellors, by contrast are below market by as much as 37 percent. Clearly, the university is making every effort to address concerns about the welfare of members of your union.
Originally posted by: WHAMPOM
Remember the good old days(see below)when even poor people used to pay taxes.
Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: Patranus
-snip-The nation?s largest labor union and some allied Democrats are pushing a new tax that would hit big investment firms such as Goldman Sachs reaping billions of dollars in profits while the rest of the economy sputters.
The AFL-CIO, one of the Democratic Party?s most powerful allies, would like to assess a small tax ? about a tenth of a percent ? on every stock transaction.
Anybody thinking this new tax would hit wall Street is wrong.
Except in rare circumstances, this will hit investors - you and me. Wall Street will just pass it on through.
Fern
Originally posted by: Patranus
http://thehill.com/homenews/ho...sh-new-wall-street-taxThe nation?s largest labor union and some allied Democrats are pushing a new tax that would hit big investment firms such as Goldman Sachs reaping billions of dollars in profits while the rest of the economy sputters.
The AFL-CIO, one of the Democratic Party?s most powerful allies, would like to assess a small tax ? about a tenth of a percent ? on every stock transaction.
How about we have a "union" tax?
I find it comical that in the worst economy since Jimmy Carter the Democrats and the labor unions want to raise taxes on investments. Probably one of the worst things the Democrats could do to the economy. Discourage investment....sounds like a plan!
However, this is the way that I see this playing out...Obama will veto this legislation if it passes because he *promised* that taxes would not be raised on those making under $250,000 just like he *promises* that you can keep your health insurance if you are happy with it.....LOL
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: CPA
Originally posted by: Thump553
Disclaimer-this tax would directly effect me-negatively.
Commentary: This is NOT a tax on investment. The proposed tax is a transactional tax-a tiny percentage of each stock sale, like a sales tax on stock.
I think it is an excellent idea and will have a minimal effect, at most, on real investment. It will potentially have a significant effect on stock speculation and potentially will make stock price manipulation more difficult and less profitable. Nothing wrong there at all. For too long I feel Wall Street types have cloaked stock trading under the patriotic mantle of capitalism. Stock trading doesn't grow the country's economy, its a glorified casino basically. Nothing wrong with the house pulling in a penny a hand or so for the general good.
By who's standard? Sickening nonsensical, feel good, BS.
As taxes go, at least the proposal is a use tax. Let the people making the trades pay for the SEC who is supposed to oversee the market and make sure it's a level playing field.
On general principle I'm opposed to most taxes, but this is one of the less onerous ones.
Originally posted by: glenn1
Originally posted by: BoberFett
Originally posted by: CPA
Originally posted by: Thump553
Disclaimer-this tax would directly effect me-negatively.
Commentary: This is NOT a tax on investment. The proposed tax is a transactional tax-a tiny percentage of each stock sale, like a sales tax on stock.
I think it is an excellent idea and will have a minimal effect, at most, on real investment. It will potentially have a significant effect on stock speculation and potentially will make stock price manipulation more difficult and less profitable. Nothing wrong there at all. For too long I feel Wall Street types have cloaked stock trading under the patriotic mantle of capitalism. Stock trading doesn't grow the country's economy, its a glorified casino basically. Nothing wrong with the house pulling in a penny a hand or so for the general good.
By who's standard? Sickening nonsensical, feel good, BS.
As taxes go, at least the proposal is a use tax. Let the people making the trades pay for the SEC who is supposed to oversee the market and make sure it's a level playing field.
On general principle I'm opposed to most taxes, but this is one of the less onerous ones.
I doubt you work in the industy so this is probably news to you, but traders already do pay an SEC fee to cover the costs of regulation (Section 31 fees). They were historically listed on confirms as SEC fees because that's what they are, but the regulators won't allow them to be called that anymore, presumably because they're self-conscious about the fact that they are causing fees to be charged.
And as for the OP, this "Wall Street Tax" will never be passed - Congress and Obama are too smart to piss off the folks selling all those billions/trillions of government debt that are being issued. In short, the wall street primary dealers have the Treasury by the balls and the unions are stupid to think otherwise.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: Patranus
-snip-The nation?s largest labor union and some allied Democrats are pushing a new tax that would hit big investment firms such as Goldman Sachs reaping billions of dollars in profits while the rest of the economy sputters.
The AFL-CIO, one of the Democratic Party?s most powerful allies, would like to assess a small tax ? about a tenth of a percent ? on every stock transaction.
Anybody thinking this new tax would hit wall Street is wrong.
Except in rare circumstances, this will hit investors - you and me. Wall Street will just pass it on through.
Fern
Exactly. Your 401k, your retirement portfolio. Anytime you move things around this could end up costing you a good amount. This is a terrible idea.
Originally posted by: YoungGun21
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: Patranus
-snip-The nation?s largest labor union and some allied Democrats are pushing a new tax that would hit big investment firms such as Goldman Sachs reaping billions of dollars in profits while the rest of the economy sputters.
The AFL-CIO, one of the Democratic Party?s most powerful allies, would like to assess a small tax ? about a tenth of a percent ? on every stock transaction.
Anybody thinking this new tax would hit wall Street is wrong.
Except in rare circumstances, this will hit investors - you and me. Wall Street will just pass it on through.
Fern
Exactly. Your 401k, your retirement portfolio. Anytime you move things around this could end up costing you a good amount. This is a terrible idea.
A tenth of a percent. 1/10 of 1 percent. 0.001.
Could you do the math on that for me if I had say... 1 million dollars in my 401k? You see... I'm not great with numbers, and I'd like to know just how much this tax would affect me.
Thanks.
Originally posted by: YoungGun21
Could you do the math on that for me if I had say... 1 million dollars in my 401k? You see... I'm not great with numbers, and I'd like to know just how much this tax would affect me.
Thanks.
Originally posted by: glenn1
Originally posted by: YoungGun21
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Fern
Originally posted by: Patranus
-snip-The nation?s largest labor union and some allied Democrats are pushing a new tax that would hit big investment firms such as Goldman Sachs reaping billions of dollars in profits while the rest of the economy sputters.
The AFL-CIO, one of the Democratic Party?s most powerful allies, would like to assess a small tax ? about a tenth of a percent ? on every stock transaction.
Anybody thinking this new tax would hit wall Street is wrong.
Except in rare circumstances, this will hit investors - you and me. Wall Street will just pass it on through.
Fern
Exactly. Your 401k, your retirement portfolio. Anytime you move things around this could end up costing you a good amount. This is a terrible idea.
A tenth of a percent. 1/10 of 1 percent. 0.001.
Could you do the math on that for me if I had say... 1 million dollars in my 401k? You see... I'm not great with numbers, and I'd like to know just how much this tax would affect me.
Thanks.
For a $1MM trade, a 10 basis point tax would be $1,000. Just move the decimal point three digits leftward for any given trade to calculate the tax.
Originally posted by: Patranus
Originally posted by: YoungGun21
Could you do the math on that for me if I had say... 1 million dollars in my 401k? You see... I'm not great with numbers, and I'd like to know just how much this tax would affect me.
Thanks.
How many people have 401ks that make well below $250,000?
How many time has Obama stated that he would not raise taxes on those making under $250,000?
Or is he only going to tax stock transactions of those making over $250,000?
I guess I am confused over the entire thing...Obama keeps saying one things and then doing the complete opposite.
Originally posted by: YoungGun21
Thanks! Could you please tell Spidey07 and his friends that moving my $1,000,000 401k that would likely pull in thousands of dollars per year on interest alone would only cost me $1,000 extra.
kthxbye
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: YoungGun21
Thanks! Could you please tell Spidey07 and his friends that moving my $1,000,000 401k that would likely pull in thousands of dollars per year on interest alone would only cost me $1,000 extra.
kthxbye
If you like paying taxes so much just donate more on your return. You're assuming you're only moving it once a year. I review monthly and move stinkers and total look each quarter. It's the principle, stop taxing people so much.
Originally posted by: Fern
Anybody thinking this new tax would hit wall Street is wrong.
Except in rare circumstances, this will hit investors - you and me. Wall Street will just pass it on through.
Fern
Originally posted by: spidey07
If you moved say 500000 each quarter you're looking at 2000 bucks in taxes. Not chump change.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: YoungGun21
Thanks! Could you please tell Spidey07 and his friends that moving my $1,000,000 401k that would likely pull in thousands of dollars per year on interest alone would only cost me $1,000 extra.
kthxbye
If you like paying taxes so much just donate more on your return. You're assuming you're only moving it once a year. I review monthly and move stinkers and total look each quarter. It's the principle, stop taxing people so much.
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: YoungGun21
Thanks! Could you please tell Spidey07 and his friends that moving my $1,000,000 401k that would likely pull in thousands of dollars per year on interest alone would only cost me $1,000 extra.
kthxbye
If you like paying taxes so much just donate more on your return. You're assuming you're only moving it once a year. I review monthly and move stinkers and total look each quarter. It's the principle, stop taxing people so much.
You can move money within a 401k/IRA as many times as you like without any tax consequences.
