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What is tax supported surplus?

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What is tax supported surplus?

Postby Ray Rider on Mon Apr 01, 2013 10:06 pm

So a classmate of mine is working on an applied research project involving urban design/city planning and the economic feasibility of various plans. When looking up city records on revenue/deficits, he found that the city is claiming it has run a tax-supported surplus every year since 2008 although the city's debt ($2 billion in 2008) has been increasing by roughly $200 million every year. How do those two claims reconcile, or what does that term ("tax supported deficit/surplus") even mean?
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby Phatscotty on Tue Apr 09, 2013 1:13 am

Ray Rider wrote:So a classmate of mine is working on an applied research project involving urban design/city planning and the economic feasibility of various plans. When looking up city records on revenue/deficits, he found that the city is claiming it has run a tax-supported surplus every year since 2008 although the city's debt ($2 billion in 2008) has been increasing by roughly $200 million every year. How do those two claims reconcile, or what does that term ("tax supported deficit/surplus") even mean?


another redefinition and recreation of words and terminology meant to hide the truth

get used to it. In a time when words can be redefined based on need and want, no words can have any real meaning or definition. Definitions are subjective...it depends who is defining.

I talk to this socialist friend of mine on facebook all the time, and whenever I challenge her with a question, she starts using language just like what you describe, mostly because she already knows the implication beforehand and is willingly trying to distort the truth to justify her load of bullshit/not take responsibility/ignore the results.

Another angle is crooked book-keeping. In my state, we pay taxes for "roads", but when it comes time to build the roads, we borrow that money through bonding. It's an explanation to form an excuse about why the money that is supposed to be there never is, or is if only "on paper"

Probably the same way Social Security is somehow in surplus
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby BigBallinStalin on Tue Apr 09, 2013 1:27 am

Ray, do you have a link to the document?
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby PLAYER57832 on Wed Apr 10, 2013 6:05 pm

Ray Rider wrote:So a classmate of mine is working on an applied research project involving urban design/city planning and the economic feasibility of various plans. When looking up city records on revenue/deficits, he found that the city is claiming it has run a tax-supported surplus every year since 2008 although the city's debt ($2 billion in 2008) has been increasing by roughly $200 million every year. How do those two claims reconcile, or what does that term ("tax supported deficit/surplus") even mean?

I googled, to see if there were some kind of set definition, but found nothing. Sounds like it might have meant that they were somehow trying to pretend that more taxes were being generated because of how they invested/used the money. I remember a similar argument, though not those words when a local community was debating offering Walmart & Lowe's a tax break to locate in one municipality as opposed to another right next door. The idea was that while they would be losing x business dollars, the jobs would generate y income over and above the money lost. Your example would no doubt be much more complex, but something in that realm might be what they were trying to claim?

But, it could also have meant something like they were taking in more tax than projected (though not sure how that could be termed a tax supported surplus..),

Without the document, or even just more context, its really hard to tell.
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby notyou2 on Wed Apr 10, 2013 8:12 pm

Is the city Toronto, which is the center of the universe?
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby ooge on Wed Apr 10, 2013 8:18 pm

Phatscotty wrote:
Ray Rider wrote:So a classmate of mine is working on an applied research project involving urban design/city planning and the economic feasibility of various plans. When looking up city records on revenue/deficits, he found that the city is claiming it has run a tax-supported surplus every year since 2008 although the city's debt ($2 billion in 2008) has been increasing by roughly $200 million every year. How do those two claims reconcile, or what does that term ("tax supported deficit/surplus") even mean?


another redefinition and recreation of words and terminology meant to hide the truth

get used to it. In a time when words can be redefined based on need and want, no words can have any real meaning or definition. Definitions are subjective...it depends who is defining.

I talk to this socialist friend of mine on facebook all the time, and whenever I challenge her with a question, she starts using language just like what you describe, mostly because she already knows the implication beforehand and is willingly trying to distort the truth to justify her load of bullshit/not take responsibility/ignore the results.

Another angle is crooked book-keeping. In my state, we pay taxes for "roads", but when it comes time to build the roads, we borrow that money through bonding. It's an explanation to form an excuse about why the money that is supposed to be there never is, or is if only "on paper"

Probably the same way Social Security is somehow in surplus


most of the US debt is debt we owe ourselves.
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby BigBallinStalin on Wed Apr 10, 2013 11:41 pm

ooge wrote:
Phatscotty wrote:
Ray Rider wrote:So a classmate of mine is working on an applied research project involving urban design/city planning and the economic feasibility of various plans. When looking up city records on revenue/deficits, he found that the city is claiming it has run a tax-supported surplus every year since 2008 although the city's debt ($2 billion in 2008) has been increasing by roughly $200 million every year. How do those two claims reconcile, or what does that term ("tax supported deficit/surplus") even mean?


another redefinition and recreation of words and terminology meant to hide the truth

get used to it. In a time when words can be redefined based on need and want, no words can have any real meaning or definition. Definitions are subjective...it depends who is defining.

I talk to this socialist friend of mine on facebook all the time, and whenever I challenge her with a question, she starts using language just like what you describe, mostly because she already knows the implication beforehand and is willingly trying to distort the truth to justify her load of bullshit/not take responsibility/ignore the results.

Another angle is crooked book-keeping. In my state, we pay taxes for "roads", but when it comes time to build the roads, we borrow that money through bonding. It's an explanation to form an excuse about why the money that is supposed to be there never is, or is if only "on paper"

Probably the same way Social Security is somehow in surplus


most of the US debt is debt we owe ourselves.


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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby ooge on Thu Apr 11, 2013 2:11 am

on social security.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N3aO_s0Yuv8. I dont know how to set this up as a video.
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby PLAYER57832 on Fri Apr 12, 2013 10:34 am

Social security USED to have a surplus USED TO be protected. Then Ronald Reagan had the "brilliant" idea to use it to balance the budget, with the idea that it would be no problem to pay it back... never mind that if he had trouble balancing when the economy was on the verge of one of the the biggest economic booms in history (thanks to tech and Alaskan oil), it would be even harder in the future.

That has been the typical answer for a few decades now.. pass on any costs to the future and pretend everything is "just fine" or at least "getting better" -- and pretend that they were not taking from the average folks in the future to fill the pockets of a few right then.
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby BigBallinStalin on Fri Apr 12, 2013 10:48 am

PLAYER57832 wrote:Social security USED to have a surplus USED TO be protected. Then Ronald Reagan had the "brilliant" idea to use it to balance the budget, with the idea that it would be no problem to pay it back...


So, did Ronald Reagan issue an executive order to make that happen?

If so, how did the Supreme Court react to that?

If not, then what? Was it Congress which approved of it?
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby PLAYER57832 on Fri Apr 12, 2013 3:30 pm

BigBallinStalin wrote:
PLAYER57832 wrote:Social security USED to have a surplus USED TO be protected. Then Ronald Reagan had the "brilliant" idea to use it to balance the budget, with the idea that it would be no problem to pay it back...


So, did Ronald Reagan issue an executive order to make that happen?

If so, how did the Supreme Court react to that?

If not, then what? Was it Congress which approved of it?

Study history...

It puts your economic theories in context. .
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby BigBallinStalin on Fri Apr 12, 2013 3:45 pm

PLAYER57832 wrote:
BigBallinStalin wrote:
PLAYER57832 wrote:Social security USED to have a surplus USED TO be protected. Then Ronald Reagan had the "brilliant" idea to use it to balance the budget, with the idea that it would be no problem to pay it back...


So, did Ronald Reagan issue an executive order to make that happen?

If so, how did the Supreme Court react to that?

If not, then what? Was it Congress which approved of it?

Study history...

It puts your economic theories in context. .


Oh, so you don't know. Then we can discard your claims.

Your post reminds me of those who say, "it's all President X's fault," yet they forget the role of Congress, the Judicial System, and public opinion/the electorate. Some do this because it's easy to cast all blame on one person--it doesn't require much thought nor defense (e.g. your response).
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby patches70 on Fri Apr 12, 2013 4:02 pm

BigBallinStalin wrote:
PLAYER57832 wrote:
BigBallinStalin wrote:
PLAYER57832 wrote:Social security USED to have a surplus USED TO be protected. Then Ronald Reagan had the "brilliant" idea to use it to balance the budget, with the idea that it would be no problem to pay it back...


So, did Ronald Reagan issue an executive order to make that happen?

If so, how did the Supreme Court react to that?

If not, then what? Was it Congress which approved of it?

Study history...

It puts your economic theories in context. .


Oh, so you don't know. Then we can discard your claims.

Your post reminds me of those who say, "it's all President X's fault," yet they forget the role of Congress, the Judicial System, and public opinion/the electorate. Some do this because it's easy to cast all blame on one person--it doesn't require much thought nor defense (e.g. your response).



Haha, what an ideologue Player is. All Reagan's fault. Outstanding! I'm surprised she didn't try to pin it on Bush Jr!
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby ooge on Sat Apr 13, 2013 2:43 am

PLAYER57832 wrote:Social security USED to have a surplus USED TO be protected. Then Ronald Reagan had the "brilliant" idea to use it to balance the budget, with the idea that it would be no problem to pay it back... never mind that if he had trouble balancing when the economy was on the verge of one of the the biggest economic booms in history (thanks to tech and Alaskan oil), it would be even harder in the future.

That has been the typical answer for a few decades now.. pass on any costs to the future and pretend everything is "just fine" or at least "getting better" -- and pretend that they were not taking from the average folks in the future to fill the pockets of a few right then.


=D> =D> =D>
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby spurgistan on Sat Apr 13, 2013 8:28 am

Ray Rider wrote:So a classmate of mine is working on an applied research project involving urban design/city planning and the economic feasibility of various plans. When looking up city records on revenue/deficits, he found that the city is claiming it has run a tax-supported surplus every year since 2008 although the city's debt ($2 billion in 2008) has been increasing by roughly $200 million every year. How do those two claims reconcile, or what does that term ("tax supported deficit/surplus") even mean?


To get back to this, what I'd guess this means is that the municipality is running a primary budget surplus, i.e. is taking in more money in revenues than it loses in expenditures, while the cost of servicing debt rises.
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Re: What is tax supported surplus?

Postby BigBallinStalin on Sat Apr 13, 2013 8:41 pm

ooge wrote:
PLAYER57832 wrote:Social security USED to have a surplus USED TO be protected. Then Ronald Reagan had the "brilliant" idea to use it to balance the budget, with the idea that it would be no problem to pay it back... never mind that if he had trouble balancing when the economy was on the verge of one of the the biggest economic booms in history (thanks to tech and Alaskan oil), it would be even harder in the future.

That has been the typical answer for a few decades now.. pass on any costs to the future and pretend everything is "just fine" or at least "getting better" -- and pretend that they were not taking from the average folks in the future to fill the pockets of a few right then.


=D> =D> =D>


How much does your Ideology dominant you?
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