2019 by the numbers

2020-Feb-22, Saturday 02:29 pm
mellowtigger: (changed priorities)
[personal profile] mellowtigger
It's the time of year for taxes again, so I'm adding to my previous numbers. It seems like this tax filing process gets ever more confusing and burdensome each year. Garbage like this is a very good incentive to stop being a homeowner.

YearGrossIncomeUS$ChangeFederalTaxUS$TaxChangeCreditScore
201630,500 2,384  
201733,800+11%3,048+28%720
201836,600+8%3,938+29%723
201937,451+2%2,839-28%730

The credit score is still a useless figure.  As usual, they deduct severely for having only a single debt: my house mortgage.  Somehow, TurboTax knows that I have a current balance of $43.1K on that debt.  Why do we even bother filling out tax forms?  Can't the government just send us the form telling us what our tax balance is, then let us file our own forms only if we want to challenge their estimation?  That process would be a lot less cumbersome.

At least there's a dramatic reduction in federal taxes this time.  Does that always happen during election years?

A much better statistic, though, is my consumer footprint.  Thankfully, I recorded the mileage (94.1Kmi) on the car when I bought it in 2013, so I can easily compare it to now (128.3Kmi) for total mileage (34.2Kmi).  Over 80 months, that comes to an average total distance that I drive each month as 428 miles.  According to one website, the average Minnesotan in 2014 drove 891 miles per month.  I am far below average, and that's a good thing.

I disapprove of shipping human bodies back and forth.  Commuting (especially as a single-occupant-vehicle) is a terrible idea.  I'm glad I've got such a low planetary burden on this measure.  That's a little good news, I guess.

The median US employee earns about $48,672/year ($935/week).  So I'm doing really well as a part-time worker.  That's very good news.

Date: 2020-Feb-23, Sunday 05:57 am (UTC)
foeclan: (Default)
From: [personal profile] foeclan
Measuring in kilomiles is breaking my brain. :)

Date: 2020-Feb-23, Sunday 04:37 pm (UTC)
mllesatine: some pink clouds (Default)
From: [personal profile] mllesatine
I had an income of 33.800 € in 2018 and paid more than 4000 € in federal taxes. *shrug*
And I deducted a lot because I drove 72 km every day (only one half of my commute counts in German tax law, so 36 km).

I think you drove 30 km per work day (If I average 22 work days a months) which really isn't a lot.

Is your credit score estimated with your tax? How does it affect your life?

Date: 2020-Feb-24, Monday 01:00 am (UTC)
foeclan: (Default)
From: [personal profile] foeclan
Oh, and Intuit is why the government can't just send you a form. Unsurprisingly, corporate greed and lobbying has been blocking that for nearly 20 years.

Date: 2020-Feb-26, Wednesday 10:23 pm (UTC)
mllesatine: some pink clouds (Default)
From: [personal profile] mllesatine
So you paid to know your credit score?

The thing about seeing ads inbetween doing forms is totally bananas. So a private company knows your taxes? Holy fuck. And of course if the company was selling you some type of software for your taxes or the services of an accountant it would make sense to make the forms slightly different or more confusing every year. You are not supposed to get better at them with practice.
Edited Date: 2020-Feb-26, Wednesday 10:38 pm (UTC)

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