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by gruez 357 days ago
>For a billionare who can already retire in comfort few will ever know to be using any kind of IRA for any purpose is outside of the publicly given justification for their existence.

So if you're sufficiently rich (by some arbitrary amount), you're now a "tax evader" and "not paying your fair share"? Can we say the same about other deductions, like the standard deduction? I doubt you'll be able to find a politician that answer "yes" to "do you think bill gates' first $14.6k in income should be tax-free?", does that mean that's "tax evasion" too?

2 comments

The authors of the Roth IRA, which initially had a $2,000 annual contribution cap were not intending it to be used by someone with $21,800,000,000 to avoid taxes on $5,000,000,000.

I really don't know how this is difficult unless you're trying to be a troll or somehow miraculously don't comprehend how numbers work.

Not at all.

The standard deduction has an entirely different purpose which is not negated by extremely high income and/or wealth.

IRA's, however, were set up for a specific purpose for which Thiel is not the target.