Archive for September 19th, 2011

A $50,000 teacher has a lower tax rate than a millionaire or billionaire … period !

September 19, 2011

In his speech, the President’s teleprompter hammered that millionaires and billionaires have lower tax rates than teacher’s making $50,000.

Hmm.

Let’s think about that.

A high earner who makes all of his money from dividends and capital gains pays 15%.  Maybe a tad less after deductions – but the deductions (charity, state & local taxes, mortgages) should be rounding error.  So, let’s call it 15%

What about a teacher earning $50,000 – all from his teacher’s pay?

Well, let’s assume that he’s married with 2 kids.

What does he pay in taxes?

Answer: 5.5%.

A married person filing jointly gets a standard deduction of $11,400

A married taxpayer with 2 kids gets $14,600 in exemptions (4 times $3,650)

So, the taxpayers taxable income is $24,000 ($50,000 less $11,400 less $14,600)

Taxes on $24,000 are $2,762.50  ($1,675 plus 15% of the taxable income over $16,750)

That’s an effective rate of 5.5%

You see, the standard deduction and exemptions are what analysts call statistically significant.

Come on Mr. President … at least get the numbers right !

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Relevant Tax Facts

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http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/i1040tt.pdf

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Exemptions directly reduce your taxable income. You are allowed a personal exemption for yourself, your spouse if married filing jointly, and each person you can claim as a dependent. For 2010, the exemption amount is $3,650.

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Accessing Homa Notes thru the Homa Files …

September 19, 2011

As many MSB MBA alums know, the Homa Notes summarize many of the concepts, frameworks and analytical methods that are the foundation of my courses.

For the convenience of MSB students, alums, and friends of the school, the Homa Notes are accessible via the Homa Files blog.

The notes are password protected.

For the password, email Prof. Homa homak@georgetown.edu

Here is the current set of notes:

01 HomaNote – Marketing Overview

02 HomaNote – Product Fundamentals

03 HomaNote – Pricing Fundamentals

04 HomaNote – Place (Distribution)

05 HomaNote – Promotion & Advertising Fundamentals

06 HomaNote – Marketing Performance

Warning: While the Homa Notes are relatively comprehensive, they are incomplete without Prof. Homa’s accompanying oral elaboration.

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Ford ads a new benefit: buying from a company that stands on its own.

September 19, 2011

Punch lineFord hit the airwaves with a potentially controversial ad touting the fact that it’s an American company that stands on its own … unlike its bailed out competitors.

I like it …

Excerpted from US News: Ford TV Ad Slams Obama Auto Bailouts article & video

America is still fighting over President Obama’s costly bailout of Chrysler and General Motors. Especially the owners of Ford, the only member of Detroit’s “Big Three” who rejected the government dole and emerged perfectly healthy.

In its most political ad in the so-called “Drive One” ads where real drivers are thrust before cameras to explain why they picked Ford, a real Ford F-150 pick-up driver is featured.

His name is Chris. After he sits down the “reporters” bark “Chris, Chris.” One asks him to explain why “was buying American important to you.”

Sitting and looking sincere and serious, Chris says:

I wasn’t going to buy another car that was bailed out by our government.

I was going to buy from a manufacturer that’s standing on their own: win, lose, or draw.

That’s what America is about is taking the chance to succeed and understanding when you fail that you gotta’ pick yourself up and go back to work.

Ford is that company for me.”

Now, let’s see if Chris the Ford buyer gets tax audited like Joe the Plumber …

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Big East wobbling as Pitt & Syracuse head for the ACC …

September 19, 2011

Punch line: Georgetown’s Big East Conference may be losing its 4th and 5th teams to the ACC … whacking the Big E’s stature and money-making capacity.

Georgetown is caught in a pickle since it’s a ‘major’ in basketball but not in football.

Excerpted from WSJ

The Atlantic Coast Conference has received application letters from Pittsburgh and Syracuse to join the league.

If the move goes forward, Pittsburgh and Syracuse would become the fourth and fifth schools to leave the Big East for the ACC in the past decade. Virginia Tech and Miami joined in 2004, and Boston College followed a year later as the ACC’s 12th member.

Syracuse is a founding member of the Big East, and Pittsburgh joined the league in 1982.

The Big East’s situation is tricky because of seven non-football members such as Georgetown and Villanova that help make it one of the nation’s strongest basketball conferences.

The basketball schools and football schools often have different agendas.

Losing Pitt and Syracuse would be a huge blow to Big East basketball as well as football.

The other football-playing members of the Big East are Rutgers, Connecticut, Louisville, South Florida, Cincinnati and West Virginia.

There already has been speculation that West Virginia would be a target for the SEC

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