
Great Depression Online
Long Beach, CA
March 26, 2010
Inside This Issue You Will Discover…
*** Sustaining the Myth
*** Soon Everyone Will Be Rich
*** Help! I’ve Been Taxed and I Can’t Get Up
*** And More
Sustaining the Myth
“Myths and legends die hard in
The truth is that free health care for everyone is not
really free at all; it’s expensive.
We’re not against the healthcare bill because we like to
see the mommas of impoverished children die. Rather, we’re
against it because we have a strong aversion to being told what to
do. Moreover, we abhor paying someone our hard earned money so
they can tell us what to do.
“YOUR RESPONSE IS REQUIRED BY LAW,” says the U.S. Census
Form envelope that arrived in our mailbox the other day. Our
initial reaction to this dictate was to rip it to pieces. What
law? Why is it required?
Soon Everyone Will Be Rich
Free healthcare for everyone will initially be funded by
soaking the rich…those making more than $200,000 a year. But
soon, everyone will be rich according to the government. For
the new payroll taxes aren’t indexed to inflation.
With all the money the Fed’s creating, a $200,000 income
will quickly become the new $50,000 income. Just twenty years
ago, $50,000 a year was a very nice income. Yet $50,000 today
equals what $30,000 equaled in 1990.
Today the median income is $81,000. Not long ago that
was some serious coin. Soon $200,000 will be the median.
That’s when half the workers will be penalized with much higher
taxes to pay for free healthcare for everyone.
To discover more of the particulars, including 16,500 new
IRS employees to keep tabs on you, plus how to profit from the next
wave of inflation, we’ll turn it over to our friend Jeff Clark,
Senior Editor, Casey’s Gold & Resources Report.
Enjoy,
M.N. Gordon
Great Depression Online
---
Help! I’ve Been Taxed and I Can’t Get Up
By Jeff Clark, Senior Editor, Casey’s Gold & Resources Report
Like many of you, the passage of the healthcare bill wasn’t
met with the popping of champagne in my house. I found myself
chanting “Uncle Sam, Uncle Sham” as the day wore on. Higher taxes
and other major changes are headed our way. And yet, I think there’s
something in the bill that’s even more dastardly.
If you’re a supporter of the bill, you’d point to its
benefits: Poor adults will get Medicaid. Low-income families will
get federal subsidies to buy insurance. Small businesses may get
tax credits. Kids will be able to stay on the parents’ policy until
they turn 26. Seniors get additional prescription drug coverage.
People with pre-existing medical conditions can’t be denied or
dropped.
While no one is really against any of those things, the
elephant in the room (or boa constrictor in the bed) is how those
things are going to be paid for. Here’s how: the “wealthy” will pay
higher taxes; businesses with 50 or more employees will have to
insure them or pay a penalty; individuals will have to pay a fine if
they don't buy insurance; premiums will rise for many who already
have insurance; and seniors with Medicare Advantage policies could
lose those plans or pay more to keep them.
~~~~~~Profit from Crisis~~~~~~
It’s easy to see that while the value of the dollar dropped
like a stone, gold predictably stayed constant and held its own.
But as good as gold is at building and preserving your wealth, an
even smarter way to profit from the ongoing crisis is to exploit
gold’s slingshot effect and maximize profits from the inevitable
rise in gold. Simply by using the power of leverage, you can
increase gold’s gains by 4-1 or more.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Regardless of how you feel about the bill, the fact is that
taxes are going up, and not necessarily just on the “wealthy.” The
healthcare plan will cost $940 billion over the next decade, almost
$100 billion a year.
I haven’t read the 2,407-page bill (almost twice as long as
the Gutenberg Bible), but there are plenty now who have. Here’s a
summary I compiled, from various sources, that outlines the tax
ramifications of what is now the law of the land.
Assuming the Senate passes the package of changes, the
biggest tax increases will be in Medicare payroll taxes. Those take
two forms, both starting in 2013:
* Singles earning more than $200,000 and couples
earning $250,000 will pay 0.9% more on wages and self-employment
income.
* All investment earnings will be taxed an additional
3.8%. This includes capital gains, dividends, and interest, the
first time in history the Medicare tax is applied to them.
But keep in mind that the Bush tax cuts expire at the end
of this year, which will push the Medicare tax on capital gains to
23.8% in 2013 on these earners. Dividends, currently taxed at the
top rate of 15%, will be taxed as ordinary income, with the top rate
scheduled to rise to 39.6% (from 35%).
This means that the tax on dividends could go as high as
43.4% when the new Medicare tax goes into effect in 2013. (Obama
has proposed a top dividend tax rate of 20%, so if Congress enacts
his proposal, the top tax rate for dividends would “only” rise to
the 23.8% level in 2013.)
You may think you’ll escape this tax if you’re not “rich.”
But it’s those darn Unintended Consequences politicians never seem
to think about that could still sting you. For example, the 3.8%
Medicare surtax could snag you if you happen to sell some real
estate for a big gain.
The other major tax increase is the one imposed on health
insurance plans that are more generous, the so-called “Cadillac”
health plans. And this tax increase doesn’t just apply to
high-income earners; those state and union workers that lobbied for
better health coverage instead of big pay increases are going to
find they’re included with the “rich” in a new excise tax. Starting
in 2018, family insurance plans valued at more than $27,500 ($10,200
for individuals) would pay a 40% tax above that level.
Ouch.
And there’s other ways you’ll be taxed, particularly
through the magic of “passing it on to the consumer.”
For example, pharmaceutical manufacturers will pay an
annual fee based on their market share starting in 2011; same for
health insurers, starting in 2014. A 2.3% excise tax on the sale of
medical devices will start in 2013. A 10% excise tax on indoor
tanning services goes into effect this July.
How will all these businesses afford the additional tax?
They won’t. You’ll pay it, through higher prices.
Further, were you one of those who incurred medical
expenses above 7.5% of your income, thus allowing you to deduct
them? That ceiling will be 10% starting in 2013. (It remains 7.5%
for those over 65.)
There’s more, most of it in the form of greater
restrictions, increased penalties, and higher fines on various
entities, businesses, health plans, or individuals. But what I
especially cringed at was this: the bill vastly expands the
responsibilities of, and gives greater strength to, the IRS. The
agency will hire as many as 16,500 additional auditors, agents, and
other employees just to enforce all the new taxes and penalties.
Specifically, the bill will empower the IRS to do the
following: verify citizens have “acceptable” health care coverage;
impose fines up to $2,085 or 2% of income (whichever is greater) for
failure to purchase “minimum essential coverage”; confiscate tax
refunds; and increase audits.
The upshot is that this will force many taxpayers to be
more conscientious of monitoring their income and tax withholding.
Perhaps most damaging to the government’s plans is if the
bill leads some to ask the Ayn Rand/Atlas Shrugged questions: What
if I just stop being productive? What if I stop working once my
income approaches the threshold? What if I invest less so that I
stay under the limits?
And last, here’s the time bomb that could trump the tax
concerns: none of these taxes are indexed to inflation. Since the
bill fails to index to inflation the exemption threshold for the
Medicare taxes on both earned and unearned income, it’s almost
certain many taxpayers will get to these tax levels a whole lot
quicker than they think.
What this essentially means is there is now more incentive
on the part of the government that we have inflation. If inflation
reaches 10% at some point, which is below the 14%+ rate it hit in
1980 and far below any hyperinflationary level that’s possible, the
$100,000 earner gets to the magical $200,000 level in
seven-and-a-half years. From the government’s perspective, it makes
the printing of money a lucrative affair.
Yes, higher taxes are coming. But with the government’s
built-in incentive for inflation, along with the reward that comes
from getting more citizens to higher tax rates, many may find the
tax issue an annoying mosquito bite compared to the alligator chomp
of inflation. And high inflation affects every citizen, regardless
of income or tax rate. Those who think they’ve escaped the cold may
find they’ve walked into a freezer.
With this added push to inflate, our investment strategy
for the foreseeable future is now clear: We must invest in assets
that not just keep up with inflation but outpace it.
All wise citizens do tax planning. Have you done inflation
planning?
Sincerely,
Jeff Clark
Senior Editor,
Casey’s Gold & Resources Report
P.S. We think it’s imperative investors be overweight precious metals. But with the big run-up over the past year, is now a good time to buy? Get our answers on both gold and gold stocks with a 3-month, no-risk trial to Casey’s Gold & Resource Report. To read more about how to outpace inflation by making handsome returns on your investments, click here.
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