It's counting the after-tax salary that's complex. Every player's tax profile is different.Not really as they can just could just count the cap with after tax salary.
But no owners would do that.
It's counting the after-tax salary that's complex. Every player's tax profile is different.Not really as they can just could just count the cap with after tax salary.
But no owners would do that.
Still wouldn’t work, certain players get deductions others wouldn’t get, ie one example is jock taxes etc.Not really as they can just could just count the cap with after tax salary.
But no owners would do that.
53% tax is absolutely wild lolIMO the government involvement in leveling the playing surface is a non-starter.
No one should want any government involvement in professional sports, ever.
The NHL and the Players Association should address the unequal playing field.
Leveling the surface really would require balancing the Cap per tax jurisdiction.
This is a real issue, not a perceived issue. One player just signed a contract that defers payment 10 years beyond his playing career and part of the reasoning was to get more of that money in his pocket while living in a low tax state. That was stated in the media when it was being discussed. Obviously, there are other tax avoidance steps every individual can take, but the inequity is real.
The solution is beyond my abilities, and likely most of the posters here, as it would take an understanding of every tax law for all the states and provinces, and from what I've read in the past, where games are played, where players are legal residences of, and more than I know.
I'm sure tax laws change over time, last time I moved during the middle of the year to a new location, my return was based on where I resided at the end of the year, and my previous residence was irrelevant. Now I was an employee not a contractor, although many of my co-workers over the decades have been contractors and not employees, and most were incorporated. Some in same province some in other provinces. They paid themselves out of their incorporated companies, which also paid for their own benefits. Different tax rules apply, although over the years the government tried to call them employees if they contracted at the same location for "too long."
All this is to suggest, determining a formula to reward/increase and punish/reduce teams to arrive at a fair and equal Floor and Ceiling makes sense to me.
So a player of Matthews / marner level.
View attachment 981477
Where do you find that balancing point?
Do you use average NHL salary?
View attachment 981476
Do you use median
View attachment 981475
Just spit-balling ...
Marner yes, Matthews pays less than the Dallas example, due to points you already mentioned.IMO the government involvement in leveling the playing surface is a non-starter.
No one should want any government involvement in professional sports, ever.
The NHL and the Players Association should address the unequal playing field.
Leveling the surface really would require balancing the Cap per tax jurisdiction.
This is a real issue, not a perceived issue. One player just signed a contract that defers payment 10 years beyond his playing career and part of the reasoning was to get more of that money in his pocket while living in a low tax state. That was stated in the media when it was being discussed. Obviously, there are other tax avoidance steps every individual can take, but the inequity is real.
The solution is beyond my abilities, and likely most of the posters here, as it would take an understanding of every tax law for all the states and provinces, and from what I've read in the past, where games are played, where players are legal residences of, and more than I know.
I'm sure tax laws change over time, last time I moved during the middle of the year to a new location, my return was based on where I resided at the end of the year, and my previous residence was irrelevant. Now I was an employee not a contractor, although many of my co-workers over the decades have been contractors and not employees, and most were incorporated. Some in same province some in other provinces. They paid themselves out of their incorporated companies, which also paid for their own benefits. Different tax rules apply, although over the years the government tried to call them employees if they contracted at the same location for "too long."
All this is to suggest, determining a formula to reward/increase and punish/reduce teams to arrive at a fair and equal Floor and Ceiling makes sense to me.
So a player of Matthews / marner level.
View attachment 981477
Where do you find that balancing point?
Do you use average NHL salary?
View attachment 981476
Do you use median
View attachment 981475
Just spit-balling ...
Random idea what would it look like if contracts were signed strictly on cap percentage so the actual salary fluctuated depending on the cap
Probably worse, would be hard to create cap space in that scenario.Random idea what would it look like if contracts were signed strictly on cap percentage so the actual salary fluctuated depending on the cap
It's counting the after-tax salary that's complex. Every player's tax profile is different.
Not really.Still wouldn’t work, certain players get deductions others wouldn’t get, ie one example is jock taxes etc.
How do you set the following years salary cap, when you don’t even know what taxes players paid.
Yeah, I'm not sure you really understand how income tax works.Not really.
Like just set the cap at 95mil and that number is after tax. Let’s say player X will need to pay 4mil tax in Toronto and 3mil tax in Utah if he takes home 8mil after tax.
The 8mil will charge under the cap and the tax will be paid by whichever teams that signs him.
As long as the teams are willing to pay all the income tax of the players. It is not a difficult concept.
Keep in mind, every player in US and Canada pay taxes to the state they play in. That’s a lot of different taxes to pay to all those different states, and a nightmare to keep track of for a team,Not really.
Like just set the cap at 95mil and that number is after tax. Let’s say player X will need to pay 4mil tax in Toronto and 3mil tax in Utah if he takes home 8mil after tax.
The 8mil will charge under the cap and the tax will be paid by whichever teams that signs him.
As long as the teams are willing to pay all the income tax of the players. It is not a difficult concept.
Keep in mind, every player in US and Canada pay taxes to the state they play in. That’s a lot of different taxes to pay to all those different states, and a nightmare to keep track of for a team,
only 41 of those are home game @ULF_55 , so those tables shown earlier, wouldn’t be accurate, and then need to see where the other 41 are played.
To be fair i did say randomIt would make planning much simpler for the teams, but it doesn’t really address any of these questions.
Best be getting better at planning thenProbably worse, would be hard to create cap space in that scenario.
Makes it a lot worse when the GM is a starry eyed fan-boy, who believes in his infallibility!The buyout option, would either add escrow, or a slightly lower cap. GM’s need to be smarter.
Really only helps rich teams.
There's too many complicated variables impacting taxes to allow for them to be taking into account for the cap.
Like if a guy is a foreign national and has taxation obligations in multiple countries, signing bonuses vs salary ect. Trading players would become a nightmare....
I am saying the teams will be responsible for paying income tax for players instead of the players. PYeah, I'm not sure you really understand how income tax works.
Ofcourse there will be difficulties. But once the system is set in place, it won’t be as difficult as first time around.Keep in mind, every player in US and Canada pay taxes to the state they play in. That’s a lot of different taxes to pay to all those different states, and a nightmare to keep track of for a team,
only 41 of those are home game @ULF_55 , so those tables shown earlier, wouldn’t be accurate, and then need to see where the other 41 are played.
That would be very complicated.I am saying the teams will be responsible for paying income tax for players instead of the players. P
Nobody was complaining when Chicago and LA were winning multiple cups. Both very highly taxed states.That said I would like.tbe league to find a way to address the taxation gap. We've had GMs flat out admit it's an advantage for some teams..I'm not sure what a technical solution is in the cba though.
Nobody was complaining when Chicago and LA were winning multiple cups. Both very highly taxed states.
But in recent years yeah there have clearly been some deals made that seem to show the growing trend of players favouring no state tax teams rather than the high ones. Also players put the high tax teams on their no trade as well, since that can affect them as well especially while on a longer term deal.
I truly dont understand why a Canadian team hasnt won the cup in 30+ years. They've all been in the finals, some more than once except the Leafs of course.
I think the idea would be finding a better solution, not a perfect one.That would be very complicated.
The amount of money a team pays for a player's income tax is itself a taxable benefit that is also subject to tax.
If the player has other sources of income, would the team pay taxes at the player's average tax rate or at the marginal rate?
If a player's is to get $1,000,000 net of taxes, then how much is the actual contract amount?
Who gets credit for any tax shelters, charitable donations, or investment losses that might reduce the player's tax burden?
What happens to the contract if a player gets traded to another tax jurisdiction, or moves their primary or secondary residence from one jurisdiction to another?
These are all questions that would affect each player's income tax liabilities. It's not like paying sales tax at a fixed percentage on the price of goods or services, because unlike sales tax, income tax takes into account the entire tax situation of the taxpayer.
What happens to a team's salary cap numbers when there are changes in the roster through trades, injuries, demotion and promotions? How easy would it be to calculate the salary cap number and the actual financial obligations of the franchise?
What happens if a contract has deferred income that won't be taxed until after the contract expires? It is not possible to know in advance which tax jurisdiction would apply, nor what the tax rates would be.
One of the main purposes of the salary cap is to give NHL franchises cost certainty. How on Earth would NHL teams ever achieve cost certainty in such an environment.
I've practiced law for nearly 40 years and have a masters degree in tax law. I can't even begin to imagine how such a facile, simplistic concept could ever work.