Talk:Taxation in the United States: Difference between revisions

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Ray Van De Walker
Ray Van De Walker

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Well, please do move it then. (See [[naming conventions]].)



According to that document, p. 5, the estimate for the next year is about half. Perhaps we can be more specific, anyway. I think the subject of this article is payroll taxes. It ignores all the "hidden" taxes and tariffs that are also paid by various entities (and passed on to the consumer), such as business taxes and taxes on alcohol.



Also, it needs to be clarified if the subject of the article is U.S. federal government taxation, or any taxation that occurs within the borders of the U.S.



Finally, the percentages here need to be dated (was that all last year, or what?) --[[LMS]]



Revision as of 23:02, 24 August 2001

..."The income tax forms the bulk of taxes."...


There are two possible interpretations of that; one is true for most people and one is false. It could mean that the largest portion of the average taxpayer's burden is the income tax (true for most people, but not all), or it could mean that the largest source of revenue for the US government is the income tax (which is false). Please calrify. --LDC


This needs to be put on a different page. I'm not sure what, though. Perhaps United States/Taxation (!!) or perhaps Taxation in the United States or perhaps United States--Taxation. KQ should know the answer.  :-) --LMS


"Taxation in the United States" sounds like a good article title to me, and of course it needs to have sections (or subpages) of its own for different historical periods). --LDC


The best available information about U.S. total revenues is probably:

http://www.fms.treas.gov/mts/mts0601.pdf

Which does indicate that income taxes are the bulk of Treasury revenue.

It's fine with me if it moves...

Ray Van De Walker


Well, please do move it then. (See naming conventions.)


According to that document, p. 5, the estimate for the next year is about half. Perhaps we can be more specific, anyway. I think the subject of this article is payroll taxes. It ignores all the "hidden" taxes and tariffs that are also paid by various entities (and passed on to the consumer), such as business taxes and taxes on alcohol.


Also, it needs to be clarified if the subject of the article is U.S. federal government taxation, or any taxation that occurs within the borders of the U.S.


Finally, the percentages here need to be dated (was that all last year, or what?) --LMS