Plus SSI (6%, if you're employed and your employer pays the other 6%, but it's 12% if you're self-employed), plus state taxes (amounts differ, but they run from 13% at the high end for CA to 0 for several Red states - most of which run deficits or cut essential services like state road repairs, public hospitals, fire, ambulance, etc), plus state, county and city sales taxes (which can be as much as an extra 15% or more depending on the county or city).We had a president recently who greatly expanded the standard deduction and cut many itemized deductions primarily employed by high-income households. I wouldn't expect the deduction to increase anytime soon.
Americans are broadly undertaxed and the brackets at low and you only pay 12% marginal tax at $44,725 AGI (nearly 60k in pre-tax income).
We were talking about the C-suite, without which the company can typically continue to operate. What prevents recognition and retention of performance in a worker co-op?the top performers in the company
Taxes need to be on assets, not flows. Wealth inequality is, by definition, a difference in assets, not in flows, and the source of a huge number of problems in society.Increase corporate taxation, implement a universal income with it?
It's still insane to me that corporations are only taxed on profits. Imagine only paying taxes on the money you don't spend on housing, food, transportation, travel, video games, etc. Would be nice from the individual perspective, eh?
You're not going to like this answer.Other than backing pro-labor candidates at every level of government, what can we do to help? And I am not asking rhetorically. I would love to see every big tech firm unionized, but it feels like a far-off dream right now. What are the first steps?
Remember "aren't affected as badly" isn't the same as "aren't badly affected".I'll concede that most other countries don't have ideal, compassionate societies. Still, I would point to the Nordic countries as being closer to that ideal than the United States. Workers there aren't affected as badly by a job loss.
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And I agree that losing your job isn't fun no matter where in the world you live. The larger point I was making was that layoffs aren't necessarily inherently bad and in fact may even be beneficial. In the long run, individuals are better off occasionally losing their job if that allows companies to be more flexible and productive, leading to greater profits and incomes. The economy functions better if companies can lay off workers during recessions or for strategic reasons.
Isn't that what we have today via Property Tax? It still seems like a shell game, we all pay it no matter what, through increased property taxes or increased rent prices to cover the landlord's property tax.Taxes need to be on assets, not flows. Wealth inequality is, by definition, a difference in assets, not in flows, and the source of a huge number of problems in society.
A land-value tax is a great place to start. Read Henry George and Piketty if you'd like to know more...
Some of us are old enough to remember a far distant time, when it looked like Google were into using some of their massive profits to come up with cool new stuff which helped people.Anyone remember when Google's slogan was "Do no evil" or something like that?
Not weighing in on land value tax -- I love seeing Georgists in the wild.Read Henry George
Bosses. Leaders lead. And unless they're leading the charge off the cliff, throwing others off is definitionally not leading.leaders
How does this address concentrated stores of wealth? Also, asked and unanswered:Eliminate paycheck withholdings.
What prevents recognition and retention of performance in a worker co-op?
Google has duplicated advertising products. One aimed at large clients ( the old doubleclick suite : display and video bidder , search and an ad server ) and another product available for everyone ( Google ads ). Both technology stack, which increasingly share common core components , has their own support and sales team. And both team would actually compete against each other for a given client. I guess Google is tackling the sales team duplication thingy and handing over to agencies/ consultancies the clients who are sort of maxed out in media spend with low increase in media spend possible on the near / mid term.This is just the beginning. Many jobs will become obsolete. But Google is doing it backwards. Sales is one of those things you do want a human speaking to you with. You cannot automate away human interaction, and especially not on your primary revenue generator.
Then again if they should layoff anybody it would be all the useless projects they have under the rest of the Alphabet umbrella. Like the team that attempted to build a time machine (because of Larry Page tech bro stuff) and then stopped when they found out it violated the laws of physics. 10/10 R&D, would buy again.
Not weighing in on land value tax -- I love seeing Georgists in the wild.
Bosses. Leaders lead. And unless they're leading the charge off the cliff, throwing others off is definitionally not leading.
Once you're above a certain point of wealth, you have to have a level of stunted empathy just to exist. If you didn't have that, you wouldn't have the wealth in the first place; you'd disburse the majority you clearly don't need as fast as you could move. The possible exception would be someone like a MacKenzie Scott where it's a precipitous launch to the top; however, she's had several years to knock down that personal wealth and there's still plenty of homeless people in Seattle (for starters). When your needs (and those of your future progeny) are met at every possible level and you can fulfill any rational wants, on some level you're perpetually repeating, "Sure, I have this thing that many people don't have and require to survive, but it's better in my hands because reasons." To them, you are reduced to a number on a spreadsheet, down the ol' Stalin Slide from tragedy to statistic.
How does this address concentrated stores of wealth? Also, asked and unanswered:
cuts are mostly in the "Large Customer Sales" (LCS) team, which serves the company's biggest advertising clients.
Everyone should scream socialism, and be happy about it. Most Americans have no idea what socialism is, and don't realize that the government programs and policies that they like the best are the ones that are based on it.The lack of accountability for the higher ups is my main issue when it comes to layoffs. If Google is doing so poorly that they have to lay people off then it's time for the C-Suite to get the heave-ho.
But yes, the US has a terrible system in place for those displaced by their jobs. Safety nets would go a long way (some will scream socialism) and for the couple of times I've faced a layoff, the lack of healthcare was the biggest concern.
Tax share of GDP are apples to apples comparisons to peer nations and USA regularly is on the low end of developed countries, around 20% of total GDP.Plus SSI (6%, if you're employed and your employer pays the other 6%, but it's 12% if you're self-employed), plus state taxes (amounts differ, but they run from 13% at the high end for CA to 0 for several Red states - most of which run deficits or cut essential services like state road repairs, public hospitals, fire, ambulance, etc), plus state, county and city sales taxes (which can be as much as an extra 15% or more depending on the county or city).
That total can be upwards of 50% OR MORE of someone's annual income going to the feds, state, county or city. And that ONLY applies to the middle-income bracket. The poor see far more of their disposable income go to taxes by proportion than any other income bracket.
You don't really get "tax code" do you? It's not just ONE source adding to the headaches. It's multiple sources. Even if you're well under the federal taxable income level, you're still kicking out taxes that can take up to 25% out of your remaining income and EVERYONE pays the 12% (in total) for SSI if they have ANY income (because there is no minimum income level that isn't taxed by that).
This is largely why "death and taxes" are the two things one can't avoid in life.
You could always incorporate and have your salary be paid to Yourself LLC as a contracted fee for services rendered.Increase corporate taxation, implement a universal income with it?
It's still insane to me that corporations are only taxed on profits. Imagine only paying taxes on the money you don't spend on housing, food, transportation, travel, video games, etc. Would be nice from the individual perspective, eh?
Nothing. Nothing will replace them. Buggy drivers won't become cabbies. Horseshoe fitters won't become mechanics. They'll just become unemployed and labeled dead weight by society.Sad for those people but not surprising. It's hard to be complacent as many jobs can and will be culled. Harder is to figure out what will replace them even though that happened in previous step changes in the past.
There are a few sections in Kim Stanley Robinson's Ministry For The Future that echo this. When people have had enough and they have nothing more to lose, then expect them to give up their lives in the hope their kids and grandkids have a better future.You're not going to like this answer.
Rich people need to be afraid again. They need to be so worried about bad things happening to either their bank accounts and/or their lives because the general populace has had enough that they're willing to renegotiate the social contract so it's not outrageously in their favour.
The last time we got stuff from the wealthy, they were scared of being hung, beaten and/or shot (early 20th century) or afraid of communism (mid- to late-20th century). The reason they're running roughshod over us now is because, instead of fearing the poor, they're contemptuous of them.
Considering it’s the same dollars that circulate through an economy again and again, that’s about the dumbest way to look at taxes I’ve ever seen. You haven’t even tried to understand how an economy works, yet feel knowledgeable enough to comment on tax policy? Is this what passes for an understanding of how taxes and the economy work among the right wing? If so, no wonder everything they come up with is so brain-dead stupid.How many times must a dollar be taxed?
Corp profit tax
Fed income tax
State income tax
Cap gains and interest taxes
Fees when you use gov services (ok)
Speeding tickets
Property taxes
Sales tax
Inflation
Estate taxes
We went from revolution over a 6% sales tax just on tea... to this hellish thievery. We freed slaves, only to all become them, to too great an extent.
You see, they invested in AI and now reap benefits. Now their motto is : Do know evil.Anyone remember when Google's slogan was "Do no evil" or something like that?
Obviously more than it currently is, because it is objectively true that wealth inequality continues to grow at a startling rate in every single neoliberal-or-worse country on earth.How many times must a dollar be taxed?
Corp profit tax
Fed income tax
State income tax
Cap gains and interest taxes
Fees when you use gov services (ok)
Speeding tickets
Property taxes
Sales tax
Inflation
Estate taxes
We went from revolution over a 6% sales tax just on tea... to this hellish thievery. We freed slaves, only to all become them, to too great an extent.
Considering it’s the same dollars that circulate through an economy again and again, that’s about the dumbest way to look at taxes I’ve ever seen. You haven’t even tried to understand how an economy works, yet feel knowledgeable enough to comment on tax policy? Is this what passes for an understanding of how taxes and the economy work among the right wing? If so, no wonder everything they come up with is so brain-dead stupid.
Some things you can but it’s wildly unfair for some and depends a lot where you live and your whole situation.I fully expect that at some point in the future that AI will be sentient enough to run / start its own businesses and AI will employee humans on jobs that it cannot yet do. People will actually have AI bosses. It is not here yet but it's coming, just wait.......
Tax share of GDP are apples to apples comparisons to peer nations and USA regularly is on the low end of developed countries, around 20% of total GDP.
The high marginal rates you are complaining about only kick in at high incomes in the USA. In Western European nations they kick in super early and are combined with a high VAT.
One thing no one here has mentioned is that it's been recently established that the AI created work (like the ads) aren't protected by copyright (without changing the law anyway).Can't wait to see how this backfires on Google spectacularly
A shame that when the war starts the enemy rarely gives you years to rebuild the military before attacking.Any country spending more on defense than health in peacetime is doing it wrong.
Any country spending more on defense than health in peacetime is doing it wrong.
Time to tax AIs. Let's start with 1000% and move up from there.
Yes. The US spends about as much per capital as countries with functioning national health care systems. We just have worse outcomes, less coverage, and what is that other thing? Oh yeah, freedom.what country does this even describe? Certainly not the US, where medicaid, medicare, and veteran services are close to 30% of the budget. The department of health and human services is the federal agency that receives the most money, even more than the social security administration.
The adage that the US government is a big insurance company with an army attached seems appropriate here.what country does this even describe? Certainly not the US, where medicaid, medicare, and veteran services are close to 30% of the budget. The department of health and human services is the federal agency that receives the most money, even more than the social security administration.