- Nov 18, 2009
- 698
- 2
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Christ, are American paychecks always that complicated?
When I was in employment, IIRC the paycheck basically looked like:
Gross pay
Tax (PAYE - pay as you earn)
National insurance contributions (NHS healthcare in the UK)
Pension contributions
Net pay
Christ, are American paychecks always that complicated?
When I was in employment, IIRC the paycheck basically looked like:
Gross pay
Tax (PAYE - pay as you earn)
National insurance contributions (NHS healthcare in the UK)
Pension contributions
Net pay
And you're a Brit! Don't they, like, tax your left hand turn signals and all sorts of stuff?
I'm assuming that there's something semi-serious in here but I have no idea what it might be![]()
Christ, are American paychecks always that complicated?
When I was in employment, IIRC the paycheck basically looked like:
Gross pay
Tax (PAYE - pay as you earn)
National insurance contributions (NHS healthcare in the UK)
Pension contributions
Net pay
do you think a pro athlete with many sports related taxes and deductions would have a paycheck similar to the average american? take a good look at the line items.
$1500 for his 401k contribution lol, though in sure he has other investment revenues...
Christ, are American paychecks always that complicated?
When I was in employment, IIRC the paycheck basically looked like:
Gross pay
Tax (PAYE - pay as you earn)
National insurance contributions (NHS healthcare in the UK)
Pension contributions
Net pay
Its wrong to have this posted
I don't begrudge pro athletes their salaries, but it's funny to me that on top of their salary (minimum salary $500K/year), major league baseball players get an additional $100.50 per day for meals when they are on the road. This amount is adjusted annually for inflation.
I think there are some key differences between how tax is handled in the UK and US. For starters, I'm not aware of anything that would suggest that a sports player would get additional tax because they went to another county to play a match or three. Secondly, 'local' taxes like council tax (which pays for local services like say the emergency services, refuse collection etc) are handled separately from one's paycheck, and the amount of tax one pays is determined by the local council's expenses and the size of house one lives in (in that council's jurisdiction).
Aside from that, not that I have any knowledge on this topic but I'd expect a UK football (Americans: soccer) player to have a fairly similar-looking paycheck to someone working in McDonalds (except the figures obv). The footballer's tax return would be a different story of course; in the UK one has to file a tax return if their income is complicated (self-employed for example, or many different sources of income/investments) or over an (above average) amount.
No, this is right. Let the masses see what the elevated human race makes, so that their discontent may be stirred and the revolution sparked. Only I'm western culture is it taught that it's "ok" to make unlimited money, that you "earned it". If you really search deep down, it's not Ok to have this much wealth for contributing nothing to society while many state and cannot feed or educate their children.While very interesting to see, I agree. This is wrong to post/share.
<insert mayweather's check>
/thread
Getting hit with taxes in each city he plays in.... but whats a few thousand dollars here and there.