meggiebeth
WDW, DLR & DLP enthusiast
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2011
- Messages
- 2,481
Really interesting, thanks. You’ve just confirmed my guess that we pay a lot more income tax. This chart pretty much summarises it; you get about 1.4 USD to our pound (£).We just have a lot more people and yes as the PP was talking about I meant population differences in terms of numbers.
In a nutshell the UK is set up differently than the U.S. neither system is wrong nor right it's just what works there won't necessarily work here.
Sales tax..that varies so wildly. In my area sales tax runs you 9.5-10.5% total including state,city, county and at times special taxing districts, and that's on everything as we don't have a % break on specific goods plus a higher tax rate for alcohol, cigarette, etc .
Income tax in my state is-- taxable income not over $30,000: 3.1 %, taxable income over $30,000 but not over $60,000: $930 plus 5.25 % of excess over $30,000, taxable income over $60,000: $2,505 plus 5.7 % of excess over $60,000--these are 2018 rates.
Federally for 2018:
View attachment 314250
That doesn't tell the full story as we have adjustments that we can claim on our taxes, etc. We also pay for certain things with our property tax on homes but that at least in my area doesn't go directly to the colleges but rather a portion goes to the state who then distributes a certain portion of that to the colleges. I do however pay over 51% of my property tax towards my public school district (so elementary, middle {or junior high}, and high school) assigned to us in our area and I do pay a portion towards the Community College in my area.
Now private school is funded differently than public school. My comments regarding tuition and raising it due to funding issues were in respects to public.
My point was at a national level the way that our system is set up I cannot imagine it feasibly be possible to have loans where you only make payments on it if you earn over a certain amount, and after a certain period of time has passed, the loan is waived completely. There are loan forgiveness programs but they are not as easy as they sound just by the name and they are restricted to certain degrees from my understanding. Like the PP did mention NY and free tuition should be interesting to watch over time.
https://goo.gl/images/FuT3Mu
Fuel is incredibly heavily taxed, too. On our trips to the States it’s shocking how cheap it is.
I don’t think the size of the population ncessarily matters much, rather how much money the government has to fund these projects. Seems then that our govt does tax us much more, but we also get a lot more back.