Originally posted by: 3chordcharlie
Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
Originally posted by: 3chordcharlie
Originally posted by: PrinceofWands
There should only ever be one tax on a particular dollar...when it is earned. After that it should belong to whoever earned it. Sales taxes (among others) are more abusive to those with lower incomes. Inheritence and gift taxes (among others) are just plain wrong to begin with.
When it is earned from whom?
I see your point on distinction, but I stand by the theory. Someone who pays you money in exchange for something is different than money received for other purposes...and a tax is something specifically outside of the value of the exchange itself.
I build someone a computer. I charge the person the price of parts plus my labor. I will claim the income as taxable. (following amounts are made up) I then put $50 in my safe for savings, buy a weeks food, give my daughter $5 for allowance, loan my brother $25 till payday, pay the maid $25 for the weeks work, and give my niece $25 for her birthday. I see no right nor reason in any of those subsequent amounts to be taxed, except the maid's $25 which she should claim on her income tax, and the money spent on groceries which is too complicated to follow. The reason is that only those two amounts were a direct payment for a good or service. The savings is mine and has already been taxed and is earning no interest. The allowance is not payment for a job directly, but instead a moral lesson. The loan will be paid back and the gift is just that. None of those escaped taxation when I initially earned it.
Now, these amounts are small, but the size is irrelevant, only the underlying principle matters.
Your answer makes a lot of sense.
As a general rule, if the money is traceable as taxed income, and is given in return for nothing, it shouldn't be taxed.
But this is easily abused (I work as an executive in the family business, earn $25k a year, live in a family owned house, drive a family owned car and collect my real pay when Daddy (or Granddaddy) dies). Now my income never has to be taxed at all. When you're talking about millions or billions of dollars, elaborate schemes like this become worthwhile.
To me, there are a lot of additional questions and wrinkles, and they become extremely relevant when you consider that inheritance and gift taxes are both applicable only to high-value accounts.
Investments earn income, and this is taxable (and should be, if any income is to be taxed). When investments change hands through inheritance to a family member, this should remain true - upon sale, the profit is taxed as if they had not changed hands. I would suggest that gains be realized and taxed in the year of transfer for inheritance to non-family members, because this is an obvious route for serious abuse.