- Sep 4, 2005
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...okay, maybe I'm undersimplifying it. But, in any personal experience I've had, to pay off debt (whether it be a student loan, car, etc...) you'd use the following logic.
I owe X amount of dollars. I make Y amount of dollars. I spend Z amount of dollars.
If I want to pay off X, and Y hasn't changed, I have to make a cuts to Z to accomodate it. I've heard both political parties make claims to be able to do this without cutting Z, and some cases people claim it can be done without increasing Y. Am I crazy or is that impossible?
I've come up with a few simple plans that could address the debt crisis and wanted to get some outside input to see if I'm off-base.
Our GNI (Gross National Income)
Apprx: $14.5 trillion
Our current Debt:
Apprx: $13.5-$14.7 trillion (depending on which source you go to)
My plan would involve creating a separate tax (and please try not to cringe too much when you hear the 'T' word
) where the money gained through it can NOT be spent on other things, and can NOT be borrowed again, and MUST be kept isolated from the rest of the government finances.
It would involve paying $750/year on every $50,000 earned. (for both the private and business sectors)
If the GNI estimations are accurate, this would end up being approximately $218 billion dollars we could put in this isolated account which would hit the $14.5 trillion total in approximately 66 years. Since we've spent 100 years getting into this mess by letting the debt run wild, reducing it in a little over half them time isn't so bad.
How this would impact people?
Yearly income: Cost per year:
$40,000 $600
$60,000 $900
$100,000 $1,500
$1,000,000 $15,000
I think these sacrifices are completely reasonable for the income levels.
For the person who makes $40,000, that works out to about $11/week. (Most people spend more than that on eating out, drinks, and cigarettes). In most cases for people making 40k, the tax return would more than cover that obligation so there would be no impact on week to week spending.
and as far a CEO making $10million a year, I don't think anyone would feel pity toward them for having to pony up $150K (if they don't think it's fair, I'll trade spots with them
)
What do you guys think?
I owe X amount of dollars. I make Y amount of dollars. I spend Z amount of dollars.
If I want to pay off X, and Y hasn't changed, I have to make a cuts to Z to accomodate it. I've heard both political parties make claims to be able to do this without cutting Z, and some cases people claim it can be done without increasing Y. Am I crazy or is that impossible?
I've come up with a few simple plans that could address the debt crisis and wanted to get some outside input to see if I'm off-base.
Our GNI (Gross National Income)
Apprx: $14.5 trillion
Our current Debt:
Apprx: $13.5-$14.7 trillion (depending on which source you go to)
My plan would involve creating a separate tax (and please try not to cringe too much when you hear the 'T' word
It would involve paying $750/year on every $50,000 earned. (for both the private and business sectors)
If the GNI estimations are accurate, this would end up being approximately $218 billion dollars we could put in this isolated account which would hit the $14.5 trillion total in approximately 66 years. Since we've spent 100 years getting into this mess by letting the debt run wild, reducing it in a little over half them time isn't so bad.
How this would impact people?
Yearly income: Cost per year:
$40,000 $600
$60,000 $900
$100,000 $1,500
$1,000,000 $15,000
I think these sacrifices are completely reasonable for the income levels.
For the person who makes $40,000, that works out to about $11/week. (Most people spend more than that on eating out, drinks, and cigarettes). In most cases for people making 40k, the tax return would more than cover that obligation so there would be no impact on week to week spending.
and as far a CEO making $10million a year, I don't think anyone would feel pity toward them for having to pony up $150K (if they don't think it's fair, I'll trade spots with them
What do you guys think?