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Este blog fue creado para publicar novedades sobre la mineria en Argentina, complementando así nuestro web y presencia en redes sociales. Como todas nuestras actividades, apunta a conectar a la comunidad minera argentina y establecer un ámbito de promoción de la actividad en el mundo, generando oportunidades de negocios.
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This blog was created to publish news on argentinean mining, thus complementing our website and presence in social networks. As all of our activities, it intends to connect the mining community in Argentina and provide a place to promote the activity in the world, developing business opportunities.

8 dic 2009

Buy Gold, Be Smart

by Doug Casey
Buying Gold is one step towards defending yourself from big government, says Casey Research...

AFTER A relaxing Thanksgiving break, I anticipated to return to work in a lighter frame of mind, writes David Galland, managing director of Casey Research.
However, the following item from FOX News crushed that hope right away:

Lawmakers Propose 'War Surtax' to Pay for Troop Increase in Afghanistan
Two top Democrats say they want to impose a new tax on the wealthy to finance any increase in US troops for the Afghanistan war.
Rep. David Obey, D-Wis., chairman of the purse string-controlling House Appropriations Committee, is calling the idea a "war surtax". He said that just as the federal government is expected to pay for its proposed intervention in the health care sector with new taxes, any escalated involvement in Afghanistan should come with a payment plan.
"If we have to pay for the health care bill, we should pay for the war as well...by having a war surtax," Obey told ABC News in an interview that aired Monday. "The problem in this country with this issue is that the only people that has to sacrifice are military families and they've had to go to the well again and again and again and again, and everybody else is blithely unaffected by the war."

Regular Casey readers know I'm vehemently opposed to the doomed adventure in Afghanistan. On that front alone, the idea of a war tax is like a shard of glass in my eye.

But it's even worse than that. It shows just how degraded this country has become – picking the pockets of the productive is now pretty much the only remaining source of funding the administration and its allies can imagine.

Just to be sure we keep this in perspective: At this moment, if you earn more than $250,000 a year (which isn't what it used to be, given the steady erosion of inflation over the last 30 years), you will pay federal income taxes of about 35%, no estate taxes, and a 15% capital gains tax should the money you put at risk in the market return a profit.

As soon as next year – if the government moves up the expiration of the Bush tax cuts, as I very much expect them to – the top tax bracket will go to 39%. On top of that, the current healthcare legislation will add a 5.4% surcharge. Then, add in the Democrats' proposed 5% war tax. So straight up we're talking 49%.

Then there's a near doubling of capital gains taxes, from 15% to as high as 28%. And, of course, the return of the estate tax.

But that's just for starters, because everywhere you look states and municipalities are raising taxes and fees, and attorney generals, taking a page out of Caligula's playbook, are casting about for their next deep-pocketed victim.

At the end of the day, the top tax rate in the US, starting as early as next year, will soar way over 50% of income. While further number crunching is required, it is a very safe assumption that top income earners will soon be paying over 65% of their income in taxes.

Which is to say, if you are in a top tax bracket, every penny you earn between January 1 and August 25 will go straight into the coffers of one layer of government or another. And this while more than 40% of Americans pay no income taxes at all.

This is just another symptom of the single biggest problem now facing the US (and for that matter, the world): the ballooning size and cost of government. And there are no speed bumps in sight.

Even so, endless complaining won't really do anything other than raise the blood pressure. So, what can we actually do about it? Some ideas:

Continue reading at >> BullionVault

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1 comentario:

  1. This is an interesting analysis, and it suggests stocks with Argentinean assets as a viable destination for diversifying globally. Interesting read!!

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