Momentum - Business to Business Online Magazine MOMENTUM Holiday 2017 Final | Page 15
Taxing Matters
The Twelve Days of Christmas
from the
Tax Foundation
N early
everything is taxed by someone, somewhere,
somehow. Last Christmas, the Tax Foundation (an incredible
organization with a vision of “A world where the tax code
doesn’t stand in the way of success) shared the following
“gift” that I now share with yo u (with permission). There’s
nothing practical about the gifts from the Twelve Days of
Christmas—just how often do you really need lords a-
leaping? But have you ever considered the tax implications?
(No. We realize that the answer is no.) Let’s remedy that by
taking a look at the list, in declining order:
12 Drummers Drumming In India, local government
officials dispatch drum bands to the businesses of those in
arrears on their taxes in an attempt to shame the owners
into payment.
11 Pipers Piping You’re off to hear a holiday woodwind
ensemble, but you’re vexed by the question of whether
your concert ticket is subject to sales tax. The answer: it
depends. In some states, concerts are considered
educational events and therefore potentially exempt from
the sales tax.
10 Lords A-Leaping The peerages must be in really bad
shape if the lords are leaping to make a quick buck, but in
Nevada under the state’s old Live Entertainment Tax, you
might have been in luck. The 10% tax was not imposed if
the entertainment in question was provided by employees
who only occasionally served as entertainers.
9 Ladies Dancing These nine ladies were likely performers
sponsored by a guild. These guilds originally came into
being largely as a response to arbitrary taxation in a time
when feudal lords had nearly unfettered authority to levy
taxes on trade within their fiefs.
8 Maids A-Milking Let’s talk about the preferential
treatment of dairy cattle in the tax code, shall we? In a
county in Alberta, Canada, ranchers feuded with local
government over a $3 per head tax on large beef cattle
operations. Dairy cattle, however, were exempt. Virginia has
similar issues.
7 Swans A-Swimming Swans are notoriously territorial,
especially if you have nesting pairs, so if you expect seven
swans to swim peacefully, you need an awfully big lake. And
large lakes typically mean high property tax assessments,
leading to a bill you might regret if your investments are
ever wiped out by a “black swan” event.
By: Cheryl E. Johnson,
PCC Galveston Co.
Tax Assessor Collector
[email protected]
5 Gold(en) Rings In 1991, the U.S.
adopted a 10 percent luxury tax on a
range of luxury goods, including
jewelry priced in excess of $10,000.
After disappointing revenues and a
m a j o r h i t t o c e rt a i n i n d u s t r i e s ,
Congress reversed itself two years later.
4 Calling Birds We need to address a misconception here.
The song isn’t actually speaking of “calling” birds, but “colly
birds,” which is to say blackbirds. These birds, though not as
regal as pheasants, were consumed as a delicacy
(remember the blackbirds baked in a pie?), so check to see
if your jurisdiction imposes a meals tax.
3 French Hens Overdoing it a bit on the birds, aren’t we?
The thing is, these French hens might actually be roosters,
since the Latin word for France (Gaul, from Gallia) is very
close to the word for rooster. The historian Procopius
claimed that the last emperor of the western Roman Empire,
told by a eunuch that Rome had fallen, wept bitterly,
thinking the messenger was referring to his prize rooster of
that name, but cheered up when he learned that it was only
the city that had perished. Incidentally, it has often been
argued that ruinous taxation precipitated the final collapse
of the Western Empire.
2 Turtle Doves More birds, probably symbolizing fertility or
love or maybe just the poet’s maddening obsession with
birds. Doves, according to lore, mate for life, making them a
fitting symbol of marriage. A less romantic symbol of
marriage is the extra income tax married couples owe at the
federal level and in states which, by failing to double
bracket widths for joint filers, impose a “marriage penalty.”
A Partridge in a Pear Tree All these birds are getting tiring,
so let’s talk about the pear tree. In 1944, the Soviet Union
burdened its already downtrodden farmers with a punitive
tax on fruit trees. As a result, weary farmers felled their trees
to avoid paying the tax.
And so it goes. As we near the end of 2017, take advantage
of the payment option most beneficial to you. Need help -
don’t wait until it is too late for us to help. Call toll free
877-766-2284. And, in a quiet moment, sign up for the Tax
Foundation newsletter at [email protected].
6 Geese A-Laying Are these wild geese? Because if so, you
might just qualify for Texas’s wildlife tax exemption.
MOMENTUM / Holiday 2017
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