N.J. Governor, Lawmakers Agree to Raise Tax on Millionaires (3) 2020-09-17 16:52:24.872 GMT
By Elise Young (Bloomberg) -- New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and Democratic legislative leaders have agreed on a budget deal that will raise taxes on millionaires to fund rebates for about 800,000 middle-class households. The deal will push the tax rate to 10.75%, from 8.97%, for the estimated 35,600 with incomes above $1 million. It also includes a maximum $500 tax rebate for those with at least one child and income below $150,000, Murphy and lawmakers announced Thursday at a news conference. Almost all the new-rate revenue will pay for the rebates, Murphy said. “We do not hold any grudge at all against those who have been successful in life,” Murphy said. But “now is the time,” with families suffering job losses, to ask for more from high earners, he said. Murphy, a first-term Democrat, had pitched the higher rate in prior budget years but was blocked by Senate President Steve Sweeney, New Jersey’s highest-ranking state lawmaker. The Murphy budget estimated $390 million in revenue from the higher rate. The rebates will cost roughly $400 million. “We’re investing in the middle class,” Murphy said of the millionaire’s tax revenue use. Assembly Budget Chairperson Eliana Pintor Marin, a Democrat from Newark, called the $500 -- which won’t be distributed until after April 15 -- a “serious amount of money” for a single mother earning $75,000 a year. Critics, though, said the state, hit hard by the pandemic, would do better to fully reopen businesses to boost the economy. Murphy on March 21 closed non-essential businesses, a step that slowed the virus’ spread. While he has relaxed his orders, capacity limits remain on retail, indoor dining, theaters and gyms. “What about New Jersey’s business owners and entrepreneurs who are struggling?” New Jersey Chamber of Commerce President Tom Bracken said in a statement. “Sooner or later this administration needs to realize that the business community is not a bottomless ATM machine.” New Jersey must have a budget in place for the Oct. 1start of the revised fiscal year, a nine-month cycle. The current fiscal year was lengthened by three months amid uncertainty about how much revenue would be lost because of the coronavirus pandemic. The new spending plan includes as much as $4 billion in borrowing to plug a revenue gap. Murphy in 2018 enacted the 10.75% rate, the state’s highest, on those with incomes exceeding $5 million. The millionaire’s tax would apply to 16,491 New Jersey residents and 19,128 people living out of state, according to budget documents. Among those taxed higher on incomes of at least $5 million, 1,957 are state residents, and 5,749 live elsewhere. Assembly Minority Leader Jon Bramnick, a Republican from Westfield, said the higher tax will push New Jerseyans to move to lower-cost states. “Governor Murphy’s plan to raise taxes is a gift for the Florida economy and a nightmare for New Jersey,” Bramnick said in a statement. “Passing another ill-conceived tax will make outmigration worse and shift the tax burden onto the middle class when others leave.”
David Alan Tepper, For the 2012 tax year, Institutional Investor's Alpha ranked Tepper's $2.2 billion paycheck as the world's highest for a hedge fund manager. 就搬走了
By Elise Young (Bloomberg) -- New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy and Democratic legislative leaders have agreed on a budget deal that will raise taxes on millionaires to fund rebates for about 800,000 middle-class households. The deal will push the tax rate to 10.75%, from 8.97%, for the estimated 35,600 with incomes above $1 million. It also includes a maximum $500 tax rebate for those with at least one child and income below $150,000, Murphy and lawmakers announced Thursday at a news conference. Almost all the new-rate revenue will pay for the rebates, Murphy said. “We do not hold any grudge at all against those who have been successful in life,” Murphy said. But “now is the time,” with families suffering job losses, to ask for more from high earners, he said. Murphy, a first-term Democrat, had pitched the higher rate in prior budget years but was blocked by Senate President Steve Sweeney, New Jersey’s highest-ranking state lawmaker. The Murphy budget estimated $390 million in revenue from the higher rate. The rebates will cost roughly $400 million. “We’re investing in the middle class,” Murphy said of the millionaire’s tax revenue use. Assembly Budget Chairperson Eliana Pintor Marin, a Democrat from Newark, called the $500 -- which won’t be distributed until after April 15 -- a “serious amount of money” for a single mother earning $75,000 a year. Critics, though, said the state, hit hard by the pandemic, would do better to fully reopen businesses to boost the economy. Murphy on March 21 closed non-essential businesses, a step that slowed the virus’ spread. While he has relaxed his orders, capacity limits remain on retail, indoor dining, theaters and gyms. “What about New Jersey’s business owners and entrepreneurs who are struggling?” New Jersey Chamber of Commerce President Tom Bracken said in a statement. “Sooner or later this administration needs to realize that the business community is not a bottomless ATM machine.” New Jersey must have a budget in place for the Oct. 1start of the revised fiscal year, a nine-month cycle. The current fiscal year was lengthened by three months amid uncertainty about how much revenue would be lost because of the coronavirus pandemic. The new spending plan includes as much as $4 billion in borrowing to plug a revenue gap. Murphy in 2018 enacted the 10.75% rate, the state’s highest, on those with incomes exceeding $5 million. The millionaire’s tax would apply to 16,491 New Jersey residents and 19,128 people living out of state, according to budget documents. Among those taxed higher on incomes of at least $5 million, 1,957 are state residents, and 5,749 live elsewhere. Assembly Minority Leader Jon Bramnick, a Republican from Westfield, said the higher tax will push New Jerseyans to move to lower-cost states. “Governor Murphy’s plan to raise taxes is a gift for the Florida economy and a nightmare for New Jersey,” Bramnick said in a statement. “Passing another ill-conceived tax will make outmigration worse and shift the tax burden onto the middle class when others leave.”
给我100万一年。我保证多交3倍NJ加的税。
挺好。不过就怕最后挪作他用。然后钱不够,接着加
看你这逻辑
要是白给,交多少税没人在意,最后剩一块钱到手都是赚了。换了是你自己赚的钱,猪党收税去补贴懒人,你愿意?
百万是中产?
会。。。。留下穷人自生自灭
我赚的也愿意。不想交的少赚一点很难吗?99万日子就没法过了?
能170w脱手算祖上积德吧,我还看不少降几十万才卖掉啊
可能也就170万。2007年还算高点。
那样的话谁在新泽西买房不是亏大了?还不如买在曼哈顿呢
是不是各个town税不一样?另外town里房子估价是不是比市场价低?
各个town地产税率不一样。 很多地方地税估价比市场价高个15-20%很常见
180万的房子地税3万多算低的了,
新泽西很多房价较低的地方20多万的房子一年8k - 10k的地税,你算算这税率,啧啧
人穷没关系,心还恶就是自己的选择了,看来你这辈子不打算赚到一百万,真是有出息
会搬走的 已经住的不一定会搬走 但是对于要买房的就不会去了
1M-5M 的家庭
割100万的你不反对,割50万的你不反对,早晚割到自己头上。
什么样的公民成就什么样的政府。看看纽约市,portland,LA,历史不断重复,但是教训永远存在。为什么?因为人性没变过。
关键是搬家以后还选主党不?还选,那就没救了。
David Alan Tepper, For the 2012 tax year, Institutional Investor's Alpha ranked Tepper's $2.2 billion paycheck as the world's highest for a hedge fund manager. 就搬走了
这位姐姐说的在理,除了大资本家们,大家都是韭菜,现在一百万韭菜被割,十万的开心得不得了,只能说明十万的也就是这个价钱的智商和眼界。割了一百万的收入人来养活无所事事懒惰成性的人,只能让这些人更加过分,然后就只能继续割五十万的,二十万的,最后大家均贫富全都死在这
Short hills最近买房的纽约客不知道有没有哭晕在厕所。
都加税了。然后呢?百万以上的可以搬回来了?
人家不能搬到其他税低的州么?
贫富差距越来越大,哪州都是富人少贫人多啊?加税不都是迟早的事吗?
年入100万的面着脸和年入10万的争中产名头,太不要脸了吧。
才40%?太少了,还得再加。嫌多捐50万出去,和大家持平好了,就不多交税了。
说实话。虽然我收入低。我也从没去搞清楚自己收入究竟是多少。税后收入是多少倒是很容易知道。银行流水加起来就有了。
税就根本不是个人收入。只是过手代为保管而已。就像商店收销售税,是代收,而不是商店的收入,
哪里是将近,是超过40万,还有各种股票的capital gain tax,算下来真是让人赌气
你这个id早就知道粉红五毛,原来是穷出来的呀,恭喜,希望你一辈子也没有被加税的烦恼,一辈子领救济
你先赚到一百万再来狂吠吧,我还能说我做到贝索斯的位子会捐出99%的财产呢,虚无的假设下结论都是没有意义的,这点都不懂,也不怪穷
看州吧,100万如果全是W2,单身在纽约是会超过40万,如果是家庭收入有很多娃就不会超过40万,如果在没有州税的州那肯定是不会超过40万了。
而且capital gain的税率才15%,收入里capital gain越多整体税率越低啊,你要是股票挣了很多钱有啥好堵气的?
看来你肯定是没交过多少税,我都怀疑你工作过没有,公司给的offer上的数字都是包含税的好吗?你没见过?还搞不清楚自己收入,呵呵,左x就是爱装x
您要了解税法啊。 100万以上在新泽西long term cap gain is taxed at 35% now.
有个印象,前任新州首富前两年就搬走了,因为加税
就不能人家打算赚到100万就多交税吗。。。。
我现在什么都明白了,原来不是轮子而死命支持川普的中产阶层,是因为民主党加了他们的税,(川普给他们减税)才恨民主党恨的咬牙切齿,那对不起没办法,美国就是这么一个一小撮富人养着一大堆穷人的地方,无法满足你们的要求,你们干脆移民吧?版上麦当劳不是一直在推销德国🇩🇪吗,欢迎你们去那里!
前首富大概六七年前搬走的,去了佛罗里达,反正孩子们大了。正好和原配离婚,大概和新欢在一起了。
目前首富估计近期不大会搬,因为孩子还小。
这不是美国的票仓问题,而是美国的民生问题,你们正视现实吧!别再自欺欺人了!
目前首富是谁啊?overdeck? 他家孩子不小了吧?都上中学了。 我觉得他可以一气之下搬去宾州康州。反正他公司都不在新泽西没有tie.
这真的好吗?年入百万很容易搬到临州吧?一般这种法案的惯用伎俩是开始说只收富人,通过之后慢慢说收的不够,降低门槛,过几年就是宰羊中产了。呵呵,同样的伎俩都不换剧本。
富人已经交很多税了,尤其是只拿W2的,凭什么还要交更多的税?就因为你穷你有理?
联邦的capital gain是15%,新泽西州capital gain 要tax35%?你是欺负我不住在新泽西吗?还是你自己白交了这么多????
“给”您100万您当然愿意了,就算交99万还能剩1万呢。。。 要是自己辛辛苦苦挣的,突然要加税就是另一码事了。
我猜是一共35%吧? 联邦level 20%. nj州一级不分long / short term capital gain. 一律按收入收税
Biden打算把long term capital gain的最高档税率调到 39.6%,这样加上州税就超过50%贡献给 政府啦
认真你就输了,这个就是一头牛的那个笑话里面,反正没有那就随便瞎bb
一般说fed Long term capital gain是15%的,都是没什么常识的。
是,我记得是去了弗罗里达,已经六七年这么久了啊,时间可真快