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3 Steps To Save Capitalism — Chapter 3

Concluding the series, I present to you: The tax code. Not the rate — but the code itself, the 77,000 pages dedicated to helping those who should pay the most, avoid the burden.
David Nelson, CFA CMT is the Chief Strategist of Belpointe Asset Management. He is a frequent commentator and guest on CNBC, Fox Business, Yahoo Finance and Bloomberg where he discusses markets, economics and individual securities. David founded his own investment firm, DC Nelson Asset Management, in October 2000. Prior to this, he was a portfolio manager at Lehman Brothers’ New York City office from 1997-2000. From 1995-1997, he played an active role in management at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter’s flagship New York City office. Previously, he was a Financial Consultant for Merrill Lynch. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) and Chartered Market Technician (CMT), designations issued solely by the CFA Institute and CMT Association.
David Nelson, CFA CMT is the Chief Strategist of Belpointe Asset Management. He is a frequent commentator and guest on CNBC, Fox Business, Yahoo Finance and Bloomberg where he discusses markets, economics and individual securities. David founded his own investment firm, DC Nelson Asset Management, in October 2000. Prior to this, he was a portfolio manager at Lehman Brothers’ New York City office from 1997-2000. From 1995-1997, he played an active role in management at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter’s flagship New York City office. Previously, he was a Financial Consultant for Merrill Lynch. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) and Chartered Market Technician (CMT), designations issued solely by the CFA Institute and CMT Association.

The final chapter in this series [Chapter 1, Chapter 2] to help save the greatest economic engine the world has ever known takes us to the heart of the problem: Washington DC.

Chapter 3 – Trash the Tax Code

I don’t care which side of the political aisle you live on, but the marginal tax rate is the least of your problems. The left wants to raise your taxes and the right wants to lower them. The bigger issue is the tax code itself. It’s 77,000 pages long, and you can bet most of it is dedicated to loopholes that help the wealthiest individuals and the most influential corporations to avoid paying taxes in the first place.

All politicians represent some special interest group that they believe deserves a tax break. If they want to keep on the gravy train of political contributions, every so often they have to come through for their paying constituents. The only real winners in such a complex system are tax attorneys and accountants who receive the bulk of their compensation from the uber rich and from corporations they represent. Show me a tax, and I’ll show you a loophole to avoid paying it.

The argument over what the current corporate or personal tax rate is meaningless. If you receive enough deductions and write-offs to reduce your adjusted gross income, a 25%, 45% or even a 90% rate doesn’t matter. Any percentage times zero is still zero.

In 2018 nearly 100 of the Fortune 500 companies paid no effective corporate income tax. You can bet it took an army of tax attorneys and accountants to come up with the savings, and I’m confident it was legal and above board. It goes to the heart of the real problem. It isn’t the rate; it’s the complexity of the code itself which invites this behavior.

The only way out of this quagmire is to throw out the current system and start again. KISS – Keep it Simple Stupid.

For individuals, take some multiple of the poverty line and make all of that income completely tax free. After that you could use a flat tax with everyone paying an equal share but here’s the kicker: NO DEDUCTIONS.

Term Limits

Any real hope at changing a system so entrenched demands term limits for members of congress. It’s the only way to dilute the power of special interest groups to shape and dictate policy.

Term limits are supported by most Americans and demographics. The only real challengers to change are long term incumbents and the special interest groups that support them.

As I said at the start of this series, the real danger for our society is to do nothing and defend the status quo. Capitalism does not promise equal outcomes, but it should promise equal opportunity. The profit incentive and the innovation that comes with it has helped make the United States the most technologically advanced society on the planet. Without it, that iPhone sitting next to you would likely be the size of a brick.

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David Nelson is Chief Strategist for Belpointe Asset Management.

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Equities Contributor: David Nelson, CFA CMT

Source: Equities News

The Fed model compares the return profile of stocks and US government bonds.