About ASA

  • The American Shareholders Association represents the 50% of households and 70% of voters who own shares of stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and ETFs.

    These shareholders are the rank and file of the "new investor class." They hold their investments in 401(k) plans, IRAs, taxable brokerage accounts, and other vehicles.

    What unites all these investors is a desire to see public policies that encourage growth and discourage economic contraction. ASA was founded to represent shareholders in their quest to grow the economy, reward risk, and increase the value of everyone's nest egg.

Contact ASA

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Friends of ATR

Tax Links

  • 529 Plan Comparisons
    The best site to learn about 529 plans and compare state plans.
  • American Shareholders Association
    Wealth of information on capital gains, dividends, tax-advantaged savings accounts, and much more.
  • Americans for Prosperity
  • Americans for Tax Reform
    The arm of the tax reform movement. Headed up by Grover Norquist
  • Club for Growth
  • HSA Bank Calculator
    See for yourself how superior an HSA plan is over traditional health insurance.
  • Independent Contractor "Twenty Points"
    The question of whether someone can reasonably be classified as an independent contractor is an important one. The above link is the safe-harbor the IRS and the SSA uses in making these determinations. If you want someone to be an independent contractor, comply with as many of them as possible.
  • Internal Revenue Service
    The belly of the beast. All you need is here, from publications to instructions to forms
  • Rollover Chart
    What the rules are for rolling over accounts into one another
  • Tax Foundation
    These are the folks who produce "Tax Freedom Day" and have been tracking tax issues since the Great Depression
  • Tax Foundation "Tax Policy Podcast"
    This tax podcast is hosted by Scott Hodge and features a great guest list of policymakers and tax experts
  • Tax History Project
    Dedicated to noting the history of taxation. This has the links to Presidential tax returns going back to FDR
  • Tax Notes
    The premier tax publication available
  • Tax Policy Center
    They're lefties, but they have a wealth of information on tax stats at all levels
  • Tax Talk Today Podcast
    Continuing Professional Education (CPE) Podcasts for Tax Pros
  • Tax Update Podcast
    Arizona CPA Ed Zollars has a weekly "Tax Update" podcast geared for tax pros, focusing on a different tax topic every week
  • TaxAlmanac
    This premier tax wiki has real-time Internal Revenue Code/Title 26, real-time Treasury regulations, and a very helpful message board
  • Understanding Your W-2
    A lin-by-line guide to the most common tax form people get in the mail, the W-2
  • Vanguard Diehards
    A message board for the "Vanguard Diehards," a group of guerrilla warfare passive investment true believers (like me)

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Friday, May 09, 2008

Take Your Pick: Higher Taxes, or REALLY Higher Taxes

Very good analysis by Andrew Biggs in the WSJ this morning on how high taxes will go even if the Democrat tax hike is avoided.  The numbers if the tax hike is achieved by Obama and friends are staggering:

If the tax cuts expire, income-tax revenues by 2018 will rise to 10.8% of the total economy from 8.7% today – an increase of 24%. Compared to the average over the last 50 years, allowing the rates to rise would increase tax revenues by 32%.  Believe it or not, income taxes will rise even if the tax cuts remain in place, because the revenue-increasing effects of bracket creep more than offset the lower rates. With the lower rates, total income-tax revenues will increase to 9.3% of GDP by 2018. This level is 7% higher than today, and 13% above the 1957-2007 average...So even if the tax cuts are made permanent, future Americans will pay a greater share of their incomes to the government than in the past. But for some in Washington, that's not enough.

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