Bush Tax Cuts

  

Categories: Tax, Econ

Everyone loves to pay less in taxes, and the Bush tax cuts refer to those enacted during the presidency of the second Bush, George W., in 2001.

Called the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act, the cuts were meant to stimulate the economy after the “dot bombs” crashed causing the 2001 recession. The 2001 cuts were meant for families, and lowered federal income tax rates, decreased the marriage penalty, lowered capital gains taxes, lowered the tax rate on dividend income, increased the child tax credit, and eliminated the estate tax, among other provisions. The cuts had mixed results on the economy, as consumers had the audacity to save or invest the extra money rather than go out and spend it.

The second wave of changes to the tax code happened in 2003, and was more geared toward helping businesses. Called the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act, it reduced taxes on long-term capital gains, real estate investment trusts, qualified dividends, and income from non-foreign corporations. It also increased the amount that companies or individuals can deduct immediately from the cost of business equipment, and increased the amount of income exempt from the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT).

The Bush tax cuts were scheduled to expire in 2008 and 2010, but by then the Great Recession was raging. Realizing that raising taxes during this time would not be a popular thing to do, the tax cuts were extended to 2012. The cuts were made permanent that year by President Obama for those with incomes less than $400,000 for single taxpayers and $450,000 for married couples.

The Bush tax cuts, along with the war in Iraq, led to a budget deficit of $1.4 trillion in 2009, the largest as compared to the economy since World War II.

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Finance: What is a tax haven?1 Views

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Finance allah shmoop What is a tax haven Well it's

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this kindly loving wonderful place just past the gates of

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st peter you know maybe that's attacks heaven If you

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tilt your telescope at just the right angle you'll see

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the cayman islands of the bahamas You might see somalia

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although it always seems to be storming therein And lately

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you'll see ireland Yeah another tax haven Well how on

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earth are all these countries linked Well they all offer

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special tax incentives for corporations doing profitable business there such

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that those corporations more or less pay little tax if

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any Why was this even a thing Well in america

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at least before trump became president there was a severe

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hit against corporations who had divisions outside of the united

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states selling printers or search links or purple leather handbags

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for nine hundred ninety nine dollars each such that those

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corporations were taxed once by the country in which they

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did business Think france that was ah high tax rate

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And then if those companies wanted to bring their cash

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back to america to be held in an american bank

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well then those companies were taxed again turning a dollar

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Of profit into something like an thirty or forty cents

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since it made no sense for companies to lose so

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much hard earned profits so quickly to tax dollars Well

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a mini industry in tax havens grew up all around

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those unfair government dealings Well some of the schemes behind

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these processes included something called a dutch sandwich and no

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not the one with the raw hearing No in this

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one the product is deemed as having been shipped by

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an irish company but then booked or accounted for through

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a shell or quays I fake company or holding company

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in the netherlands sometimes remaining profits or then shipped to

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the caymans or bermuda otherwise known as the bermuda black

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hole Which leads the way for us to make a

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joke here But we won't I say we do ever

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strength There are three basic types of tax havens in

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a dutch sandwich Primary tax havens Yeah those are the

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ones with the shell corpse Then he have semi tax

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havens where a country will produce goods for sale primarily

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outside of their boundaries and have flexible regulations to encourage

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you No job growth for themselves and third kind is

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a conduit tax haven where income from sales mainly sales

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made elsewhere is collected and then distributed back inside the

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country Well over time the legal structure of tax havens

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has shifted But in the new post obama era which

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actively lowered corporate tax rates and defended american companies rights

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to bring american cash back home to america While the

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need for tax havens feels like it is slowly fading 00:02:43.803 --> [endTime] away But there's still more popular than tax heaven

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