Deacon923
Scooter Banks
so great, in fact, that they rewarded the party that passed it with the largest congressional defeat in recent history.
so great, in fact, that they rewarded the party that passed it with the largest congressional defeat in recent history.
Based upon your tax knowledge on display here, they should demand a refund.
The thing about idiots is that they don't know they are stupid.:bowrofl:
The thing about idiots is that they don't know they are stupid.
The thing about idiots is that they don't know they are stupid.
who the hell are the 25% of people who care not too much or less about the complexity of the tax system? lol this country is fucked
oh WTF
An extra $100 in your paycheck every 2 weeks is pretty awesome for most of the country
Guess some are getting crumbs, but mine went up more per month than my student loan payments. Works for me.
Dems will be fine. They have Louis Gossett Jr. to let them know that $200 million in bonuses is nothing but crumbs.
could use JHMD's help to explain why the dems telling poor they supposedly champion that close to $2k/yr is just crumbs isn't resonating at the ballot box.
Well most of y'all will get a free years worth of tuition for your kid if the tax reform went through over the next decade, but I guess that's just the crumbs.
Again, odd that you folks keep referring to an amount that makes a difference to real Americans as chump change, crumbs or table scraps. You've got a real sense of the pulse of the everyday american.
Again, you referring to a couple hundred bucks a month as crumbs might just be why the average joe thinks you're an elitist jerk from DC. There are people to which that amount of money matters, and it's most of the country.
When the Tax Cut and Jobs Act was signed into law in December 2017, many U.S. companies responded with press releases touting one-time bonuses to their workers. But how much of the savings from lower corporate taxes really went to workers?
Just $28 per worker, according to a new analysis from the Congressional Research Service.
A total of $4.4 billion went out in bonuses last year, estimated the nonpartisan office that's part of the Library of Congress. Divided among the 157 million people in the workforce, that comes out to under $30 apiece. "This amount is 2% to 3% of the corporate tax cut," wrote Jane Gravelle and Donald Marples, the report authors.
[h=4]For comparison, the amount of money companies spent buying back stock was over $1 trillion, the CRS said. In other words, businesses spent 246 times as much money on their own stock as they did on worker bonuses.[/h]