Yes it is.Fear InoculAg said:
The moron/idiot/low-IQ name calling is not constructive because it distracts from the fact that all of this is intentional. These people aren't doing this by accident. They are evil, and it's all calculated
i'm sure it'll be some arbitrary %...of which most tech and med/pharma companies will exceed but not be subject to.Tom Doniphon said:
Define "excessive"
Maroon Dawn said:
It's almost like they WANT higher prices at the pump
YouBet said:
Ron Wyden is the dumbest m'fer in Congress when it comes to Economics and that is supremely hard to do.
Same guy that originally pushed the taxing of unrealized capital gains that Janet Yellen later pushed at her hearing.
techno-ag said:
Corporations don't pay taxes. It's all passed on to the consumer.
A massive crash on Wall Street that destroys national wealth.Zarathustra said:YouBet said:
Ron Wyden is the dumbest m'fer in Congress when it comes to Economics and that is supremely hard to do.
Same guy that originally pushed the taxing of unrealized capital gains that Janet Yellen later pushed at her hearing.
What's the difference between taxing unrealized gains and property taxes?
They are now paying 65% in taxes on profits?rgag12 said:
The oil companies are already having to deal with this in the UK, who passed a "one-time"(errrrr actually 3 year)25% windfall tax on energy companies a couple weeks ago.
Actually they changed it and the "one-time" tax is now indefinite. Also fun fact, before this extra 25% tax, O&G companies in the UK are singled out and must pay 40% tax on their profits as opposed to the normal 19% for most corporations
YouBet said:They are now paying 65% in taxes on profits?rgag12 said:
The oil companies are already having to deal with this in the UK, who passed a "one-time"(errrrr actually 3 year)25% windfall tax on energy companies a couple weeks ago.
Actually they changed it and the "one-time" tax is now indefinite. Also fun fact, before this extra 25% tax, O&G companies in the UK are singled out and must pay 40% tax on their profits as opposed to the normal 19% for most corporations
Might as well go ahead and nationalize it.
Did you leave out paying Royalties?tehmackdaddy said:
Profit margins for big oil companies like ExxonMobil average under 10%.
At $5/gallon (current national average), let's round up and say that's $0.50/gallon.
Government takes more than twice that with an average of $1.20/gallon.
ExxonMobil's effective tax rate is about 25%, so there's another $1.20 going to the federal government ($5.00 x 25%).
$1.20 at the pump and $1.20 baked into the price already to cover taxes = $2.40.
$2.40/$5.00 = 48%
Thus, 48% (or basically half) of the price of gas at the pump is solely to cover taxes.
Basically, the price of gas is:
$2.40 - taxes
$0.50 - profit
$2.10 - operating expenses
So the taxes are more expensive than producing gasoline itself. $2.40/g vs $2.10/g.
That $2.10 of OPEX includes the cost of locating geological formations, drilling, transporting the raw materials, processing the crude oil, transporting the finished product to the market, and paying all the employees in that process.
All that $2.10 covers less than what government takes at $2.40.
I'm going to presume most people don't know that.
Or just pull out of the market before they Nationalize it and take your stuff. They don't want you there and there is no reason to be there.YouBet said:They are now paying 65% in taxes on profits?rgag12 said:
The oil companies are already having to deal with this in the UK, who passed a "one-time"(errrrr actually 3 year)25% windfall tax on energy companies a couple weeks ago.
Actually they changed it and the "one-time" tax is now indefinite. Also fun fact, before this extra 25% tax, O&G companies in the UK are singled out and must pay 40% tax on their profits as opposed to the normal 19% for most corporations
Might as well go ahead and nationalize it.