American Taxpayer Relief Act Of 2012

  

Categories: Tax, Regulations

Obviously, enacted in 2013, this law signed by President Obama made many previously temporary tax rates permanent, forever and ever (at least until the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 was passed). Highlights of the ATRA included squashing the expiration of tax breaks, kicking the can down the road on governmental spending cuts, and jacking up tax rates on rich folks.

Individuals making less than $400,000 (or $450,000 for married couples) saw their tax rates held constant with rates put into place under President George W. Bush. However, rates for incomes above that level, as well as estate taxes, were increased. Rates were also updated for capital gains and dividends (15% for most people, with a 20% maximum) while tax credits were set in stone for costs related to raising children.

Again, many of the affected rates were changed in 2017 so, while potentially interesting from an historical perspective, much of the ATRA ceased being applicable in 2018. Plop, plop, fizz, fizz.

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Finance: What are Subsidies?6 Views

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finance a la shmoop what are subsidies they're handouts pork donations [empty hands, man puts coins in homeless man's cup]

00:08

political vote buying that is when a given industry can't compete on a level

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playing field either domestically like a US cattle producer not being able to [cattle in fields]

00:17

compete against cheap mad cow meat from central Russia well the US government

00:21

will give subsidies or free money to those American cattle farmers so that

00:26

they can you know keep on keepin on that is the world market for ground beef

00:31

might be two bucks a pound but the cheapest price at which US producers can

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produce their meat is 220 a pound so the US government hoping to keep their

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farmers employed and not wanting a repeat of the Joad Family Singers that [cowboy on cattle ranch]

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you remember them from Grapes of Wrath will subsidize farmer meat production to

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the tune of some f40 cents a pound in free money donations courtesy of the

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American taxpayer given to farmers so that they can keep farming and compete [money from people going to government, then to farmers]

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without actually having to slaughter and then maintain mad cow pastures just as [man cows with uni-brows]

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they do southeast of the Chernobyl nuclear plant and it's the government [cows near Chernobyl]

01:08

policy that we want to keep our American farmers alive and well to meat produce

01:12

for another day all right well the same government handouts occur

01:15

internationally where US manufacturers have to compete against countries who [people working in labs]

01:20

allow all of their own countries companies to collude co-opt and work

01:24

together in aggressively competitive ways trying to dominate a world market

01:29

so think about the cattle industry in Russia where the Russian government is

01:32

an active supporter of its own Russian companies coming first ahead of those [Putin holding up patriotic signs]

01:36

from other countries you know yeah we're wondering why this is bad like why do

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people act surprised when countries actually support their own companies

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like their own companies or evil some out who came up with that idea anyway

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those other countries work together from the wheat manufacturer to the water

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piping distributor to the fertilizer company tapping their own politico's for

01:57

product to co-opting grinders are us when it comes time for the cattle to you

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know come home well a subsidy is essentially a negative tax the

02:05

government is subsidizing supply which shifts the curve to the left like on

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this little graph thing here that is input suddenly got cheaper

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thank you hard-working taxpayer contributions lots of controversy

02:17

surrounding subsidies some folks support them while others claim they unfairly [happy people dancing in front of government building]

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affect prices or give developed countries a big advantage over less [a group of unhappy people]

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developed countries that might not have the cash to help their industries

02:30

there's a whole lot of corruption in unlevel playing fields that cloud the

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story on both ends but no matter how mad some people are about subsidies just

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remember that no one is as mad as these cows [mad uni-brow cow charges the screen]

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