The more a company pays its Chief Executive Officer, the bigger the tax break it gets.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000087 ... primary_hs

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GBU56 wrote:Just published in the Wall Street Journal. Interesting reading.
The more a company pays its Chief Executive Officer, the bigger the tax break it gets.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000087 ... primary_hs
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GBU56 wrote:Just published in the Wall Street Journal. Interesting reading.
The more a company pays its Chief Executive Officer, the bigger the tax break it gets.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000087 ... primary_hs







































tzor wrote:Yes, there are current tax structures that result in not only corporate policies that "unfairly" inflate the income of CEOs but also hurt the corporations in the long term. There are "corporate lobbyists" who are really lobbying more for the corporate CEO than the corporation. But neither Republican nor Democratic plans are strongly pushing to tackle those issue. Democrats generally define a millionare as one making $250K or above and most CEOs that are abusing these rules are making far more than this.
The question, however, is how do you handle a CEO that runs a company to the ground, while making millions to someone like Tiger Woods who goes out and plays touraments in order to maintain a reputation that will continue to attract endorsements (which in turn bring in a lot of revenue for professional golf, clothing manufacturers and the sports entertainment industry)? Note one of the things the article complains about is the fact that the similiar tax deferral system of the common man (the 401K, which, iconically isn't available to everyone) is severaly capped while the CEO system is not.
Most conservative notions are a good starting point to address this fundamental issue. True conservatives are only a small fraction of the Republican Party. There may be a reason for that.




















thegreekdog wrote:GBU56 wrote:Just published in the Wall Street Journal. Interesting reading.
The more a company pays its Chief Executive Officer, the bigger the tax break it gets.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000087 ... primary_hs
This is not really new information, nor is it representative of a Republican tax plan. In a prior thread I posted the top 10 highest paid CEOs along with their relevant campaign contributions; there were an even number of Democrats and Republicans on that list. BBS has a potentially great thread dealing with crony capitalism.










































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