From the definitions offered here. Im not sure how inheritence tax can be considered a wealth tax - its so different, both practically and morally different
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Originally posted by Dauphin
Council tax is an interesting one. With council tax the concept of the wealth tax for its own sake is often lost. Its often not based on the ability to pay, which is an ideological basis for wealth taxes.You don't get to 300 losses without being a pretty exceptional goaltender.-- Ben Kenobi speaking of Roberto Luongo
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Originally posted by Dauphin
Inheritance tax should be treated in the same manner as gift taxes, the fact that you are dead when you give the gift shouldn't enter into it.
Canada does not tax gifts IIRC. No deduction for the donor and no income inclusion for the donee.
Thats part of the reason I don't see the logic of an inheritence tax-- If I can give something to my son tax free now, why should my death triggering that gift change the situation?You don't get to 300 losses without being a pretty exceptional goaltender.-- Ben Kenobi speaking of Roberto Luongo
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Originally posted by Zulu Elephant
From the definitions offered here. Im not sure how inheritence tax can be considered a wealth tax - its so different, both practically and morally different
I always thought of an inheritence tax as a form of or a subset of the possible range of wealth taxes. In eitehr case the practical calculation is a % of "wealth"
As for morality . . . If you accept that I own something, part of the parcel of rights of ownership is the ability to give that something to someone else. I don't see what is so moral about stripping a person of that ownership right since they happen to be deadYou don't get to 300 losses without being a pretty exceptional goaltender.-- Ben Kenobi speaking of Roberto Luongo
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Originally posted by Zulu Elephant
From the definitions offered here. Im not sure how inheritence tax can be considered a wealth tax - its so different, both practically and morally different
I always thought of an inheritence tax as a form of or a subset of the possible range of wealth taxes. In eitehr case the practical calculation is a % of "wealth"
As for morality . . . If you accept that I own something, part of the parcel of rights of ownership is the ability to give that something to someone else. I don't see what is so moral about stripping a person of that ownership right since they happen to be deadYou don't get to 300 losses without being a pretty exceptional goaltender.-- Ben Kenobi speaking of Roberto Luongo
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Originally posted by Flubber
Canada does not tax gifts IIRC. No deduction for the donor and no income inclusion for the donee.
Thats part of the reason I don't see the logic of an inheritence tax-- If I can give something to my son tax free now, why should my death triggering that gift change the situation?One day Canada will rule the world, and then we'll all be sorry.
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Silly in that it would make inheritance tax even more pointless if that stipulation wasn't there?The genesis of the "evil Finn" concept- Evil, evil Finland
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Originally posted by Zulu Elephant
To play devil's advocate...In a meritocracy, why shouldn't we have a 100% inheritance tax (without getting into the whole thing about passing on small family owned businesses)One day Canada will rule the world, and then we'll all be sorry.
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There's actually a practical reporting problem as well. If I have a million dollars worth of cut gems in a safe deposit box that I pass on to my son, how exactly are you going to enforce things?
Plus put on your 100% wealth tax and then watch as capital flees your country or alternately, ownership of most things becomes corporate with a sheaf of thick agreements that would make your head spin. I'm not even in this area of law and I could create a series of corporations and trusts with interrelated leasing and usage agreements that it would take teams of government regulators to unravel while the GRANDCHILDREN continued to enjoy the benefits of the wealth.
Heck a simple solution is debt. Own a 10 million house . . . mortgage it to the hilt and invest the rest outside the country with the big wealth tax-- or even fritter it awayYou don't get to 300 losses without being a pretty exceptional goaltender.-- Ben Kenobi speaking of Roberto Luongo
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Originally posted by Zulu Elephant
But why, in a meritocracy - where the amount of money you have is meant to be determined by the set of skills you have, should people recieve large sums of money thanks to the wealth of their family
But how many parents do you know that care about "merit" when they care for their children? I want my son to go to a good university and will pay for him to do so if thats his wish. Do I care that another better student may not get to that school?? In the abstract yes but in reality hell no!! I want what's best for my son and most of the work I do is mainly so I can provide for him. I WANT my son to benefit from my labours and thats why I work. If I provide well, my son will probably have advantages compared to some ( and disadvanatges compared to some others) but thats not what concerns me . . . making the best life I can for my son is.
I don't want to live in a pure meritocracy if it means my son's well being is totally divorced from my effortsYou don't get to 300 losses without being a pretty exceptional goaltender.-- Ben Kenobi speaking of Roberto Luongo
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Originally posted by Dauphin
41%. But then the average sod is paying 33%. Its just gloss the fact that income tax' is stated as only 22%
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