Because those who live off of hereditary wealth would still be benefitting from living in a functioning society that they don't pay in to.
This.
Because those who live off of hereditary wealth would still be benefitting from living in a functioning society that they don't pay in to.
Moral arbiter? Any transfer of wealth between individuals is subjected to taxation. In principle, there is no reason why heredity transfer should be exempted. In fact, not taxing it is a moral statement, since it is seen an "improper" to tax the transfer upon the death of the original owner.That implies said people don't pay other taxes and it fails to justify why the government should act as some sort of moral arbiter in the matter.
From what was said earlier in the Thread, the purpose of the tax is to undermine hereditary wealth. I don't see any justification for the government to be undertaking that mission.It should be dropped no matter who it affects. There's no justification for the government undermining hereditary wealth.
There's no more or less justification for undermining income or capital gains of any other kind, really. What is it about hereditary gains over x million dollars that makes them particularly out of the government's dominion?
From what was said earlier in the Thread, the purpose of the tax is to undermine hereditary wealth. I don't see any justification for the government to be undertaking that mission.It should be dropped no matter who it affects. There's no justification for the government undermining hereditary wealth.
There's no more or less justification for undermining income or capital gains of any other kind, really. What is it about hereditary gains over x million dollars that makes them particularly out of the government's dominion?
Now, I agree that mom'n'pop's store should not be taxed when it goes to the sons, as the family farm, or the house, or anything under a certain limit of worth. It is very much a moral statement, one that I agree with.
By that logic, the government is confiscating property on the death of an individual and offering it to their heirs for half of market value... great deal indeed.My parents own a house; if I inherit that house on their death, I'm basically getting a free house. Even if I have to pay half that house's value in inheritance tax, I'm still getting a house by paying half as much as I'd normally need to pay to buy it.
No, because they'll still be paying tax on purchases, investments, property, etc.Because those who live off of hereditary wealth would still be benefitting from living in a functioning society that they don't pay in to.
This.
And it also causes property to be lost because so many people can't afford to pay the tax without selling the property. It's double dipping. If I leave my property to someone, they shouldn't have to pay any more taxes than I would have.It's also to raise revenue while placing the burden on those most able to pay it. Dead people don't have many expenses, so they'll be able to pay it.
That's absolutely ridiculous. If somebody is left only property with no cash assets, how can they keep it?Back in 1987 when my dad died, we had to pay taxes on his estate- 55% to the feds and 12% to the state. Add in the 2% we paid to the executors and lawyers, and 69% of everything my dad owned was gone.
And it also causes property to be lost because so many people can't afford to pay the tax without selling the property. It's double dipping. If I leave my property to someone, they shouldn't have to pay any more taxes than I would have.It's also to raise revenue while placing the burden on those most able to pay it. Dead people don't have many expenses, so they'll be able to pay it.
I find the sense of entitlement you attribute to the government here vile and offensive. It's a one time transfer from a recently deceased person to their heirs. That property was subject to regular taxation before and the new owners will be subject to that same taxes. The government has no business raping anybody's estate in the confiscatory fashion it currently does.So? They're not losing anything if they can't keep the property because they never had it. It belonged to a dead person. Why should property be taxed when it is given while alive or taxed when earned, but be exempt when dead?
I find the sense of entitlement you attribute to the government here vile and offensive. It's a one time transfer from a recently deceased person to their heirs. That property was subject to regular taxation before and the new owners will be subject to that same taxes. The government has no business raping anybody's estate in the confiscatory fashion it currently does.So? They're not losing anything if they can't keep the property because they never had it. It belonged to a dead person. Why should property be taxed when it is given while alive or taxed when earned, but be exempt when dead?
Between federal, state and local taxes, we pay nearly half of what we earn to government in life. If we have a nest egg to pass on to our children after all the taxes on income, purchases and property, government gets more than half of what's left. It's disgusting.
I find the sense of entitlement you attribute to the government here vile and offensive. It's a one time transfer from a recently deceased person to their heirs. That property was subject to regular taxation before and the new owners will be subject to that same taxes. The government has no business raping anybody's estate in the confiscatory fashion it currently does.So? They're not losing anything if they can't keep the property because they never had it. It belonged to a dead person. Why should property be taxed when it is given while alive or taxed when earned, but be exempt when dead?
Between federal, state and local taxes, we pay nearly half of what we earn to government in life. If we have a nest egg to pass on to our children after all the taxes on income, purchases and property, government gets more than half of what's left. It's disgusting.
I agree heartily. I want anything that I own to pass onto those who I wish to have after I've passed on. I would have worked hard my whole life (taxed on my wages), saved and spent (VAT and property related taxes) for my possessions and any estate that I have.
Government think they can tax my stuff before I gift it to those I care about, just because I'm dead? They can go fuck themselves with a rusty shovel
Anyone know if it's legal to just sign over your estate and possessions to your kith and kin before you die so it doesn't get affected by the death tax? Because that is what I would do.
These are actually good points, but here people are mostly talking about multi-million dollars estates, not the family house. If you inherit Wayne Manor, you will get also a big fat load of cash with that, and you will be fine paying taxes about the house.Economists and government tend to treat being handed a house as exactly the same as being handed a big wad of cash to the value of the house. But it's not the same.
These are actually good points, but here people are mostly talking about multi-million dollars estates, not the family house. If you inherit Wayne Manor, you will get also a big fat load of cash with that, and you will be fine paying taxes about the house.Economists and government tend to treat being handed a house as exactly the same as being handed a big wad of cash to the value of the house. But it's not the same.
Then I think we are in perfect agreement about the issue. Tax the family house, store, farm? Bad. Tax the aristocratic manor and gazillions of cash? Good, or at least we can talk about it. Just don't ask me to convert quid or bucks to euros because I'm too lazy for that!Which is precisely why I'm not that worried about taxing massive estates. As I said earlier, my issue arises when ordinary houses begin to be affected because of rising house prices. The US seems to have a limit of ~$2m, but we're languishing around the £300 grand mark
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