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by throw8383833jj 1483 days ago
15%+ (CA has more added on) is not favorable when it's on your principle. If your $$ go up by x10 but your purchasing power remains the same, then 90% of your principle is being taxed at 15%. The term "capital gains" is becoming antiquated, going forward. Sure, the last 50 years have been great but no one is expecting the future to look anywhere near as rosy as the last 50 yrs. and so, the pizza keeps getting sliced into more pieces but you still have the same amount. The dollars in your retirement account may increase drastically but if the purchasing power is exactly the same, then you haven't actually gained anything. It's only in terms of accounting, that it's said to have made a capital gain: it's not a real gain.