she has some solid points:
1. Most 3rd world (and even developed economies like Greece and Italy) have turned a blind eye to tax collection...or they do not have the resources to go after delinquent sources. Our country has issues with this as well (extreme wealthy hiding income is Swiss and Cayman banks). Its garbage that the ultra rich (not some executive manager as a mid size firm) can qualify and can afford to enter these illegal money shelters, and not pay the consequences. I'm sure we all know some middle class person, that has gotten burned by the IRS for hiding income or not properly reporting it...and the IRS sure as hell doesn't take pitty on them. We need to pay what is legally due...if the top 1% is illegally hiding money, they need to be prosecuted.
2. Not taxing capital gains is a serious mistake for any country. Funds will flood the country (like what happened to Nigeria and Angola) and the supply of money goes through the roof, which in turn spikes up inflation to unmanageable levels; therefore, the poor can't even afford a bag of rice or a can of coke (Angola Pepsi was over $5 last year). Create a reasonable level (the US model is reasonable IMHO...Capital Gains Tax Rate Calculator) unless a respective country is trying to develop a specialized economy, like attempting to draw in FDI or welcome a new surge in banking/wealth mgmt. Luxembourg and Malta are successful examples of a specialized economy. For most countries, they should place a progressive capital gains tax on securities investment and break it down on a short term vs long term straddle. FYI, the US is going to be changing the long term capital gains tax in 2011...it will no longer be 0.
For the record, Ecuador (where Clinton was) has NO captial gains tax what so ever.









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