ManofSteel55
Registered User
Lots of people complain about leaving and threaten to leave, but a lot of people simply don't want to move. Even the wealthy like to live where they actually like what life is like. My comments were mostly in reference to the US - if they are going to leave to go somewhere with lower taxes, they are probably going somewhere with a very different quality of life. Money isn't everything after all. Yes, Canadians can move to the US if they get permission to do so, that happens already for some people. Some like it, some move back. People don't uproot their lives over higher taxes all that often though, and businesses aren't going to move their worldwide HQ's on a whim either - there is a lot more to that decision than "oh no, we have to pay taxes now".And why would a person of considerable means want to stay in a country where they are taxed out the ass?
Especially Canada where you have the option of just going to the US especially if you have the means to do so.
So those people leave and then good luck with that 1 trillion/year government spending that needs to be paid (at least a big portion of it unless you want to run a monster deficet with huge interest payments).
Getting like 10% of your population to pay for the majority of social services that everyone gets to enjoy is already a pretty sweet deal, you start pushing beyond that and you'll shoot yourself in the foot with an exodus of high income people leaving. And then middle class people have to bear the burden of the tax cost, so who exactly is left happy?
The people who have the most disposable income should be paying more. That's how the middle class was born to begin with. The top 10% aren't paying for 90% right now though. The real issue isn't the income tax rates alone though. Capital gains tax needs to be higher. That's where the wealthiest dodge income tax.
He probably didn’t get the 183 days, assuming he went home when season ended in April, like he usually did. He definitely wouldn’t have been living in Long Island on July 1.
Just curious if anyone knows, when JT was living in NY to play, when on the road in Canada, do those count towards his 183 days? There's a couple of weeks of time right there just in road trips.Unfortunately Tavares is in the right.
I'm in the reverse situation. I'm a Canadian working for a US company being paid into my US account.
I'm taxed on the Canadian side, due to my residency not the US side.
As long as Tavares spends 6 months of the year (183 days) in the US (including all of the time he spends on the road), he can still claim US residency. There is a tax treaty that prevents Canada from going after that money.