alucard13mmfmj
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- Jan 10, 2012
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Shower Maine with love if Maine pulls through for Ron Paul ^^.
All these taxes =|..
All these taxes =|..
And those states usually have a high per-capita GDP.
NH's wages are much lower than other states while the tax burden is many times higher (queue: People who state NH is low tax... while not ever doing the math for high earners).
Source, or gtfo. NH has one of the highest median incomes in the nation
And those states usually have a high per-capita GDP.
NH's wages are much lower than other states while the tax burden is many times higher (queue: People who state NH is low tax... while not ever doing the math for high earners).
The richest Rhode Islanders pay 5.6% of their income in taxes – less than in Vermont (7.5%) and Maine (6.9%) but more than in Connecticut (5.5%), Massachusetts (4.8%) and New Hampshire (2%).
Your post is factually incorrect.
Your post assumes that everyone in NH works for someone or works in NH. That may be your situation, but that is not the situation for a lot of people.
The people who live in NH and work in MA = Income taxes are paid to the State of MA
The people who live in NH and are self employed = Income taxes are paid to the State of NH
How do they accomplish this? By taxing the shit out of business, real estate, dividends/interest, etc? It is clear what rung you on are... as if you were actually cutting the checks you would not be living in NH.
http://www.thesunchronicle.com/articles/2012/01/01/news/10724060.txt
New Hampshire residents not far behind Bay State
BOSTON - New Hampshire has long been considered New England's tax haven of the North, while Massachusetts is stigmatized as the tax-heavy blue state on the bay.
I agree that MA isn't anywhere near the worst state when it comes to taxes. However, especially when compared to NH, every fee, charge, excise tax, toll and ticket tends to be higher, not just the main taxes people think about. And while on a whole, 4 states have a combined tax rate lower than NH, property taxes vary significantly in NH. Some of the communities in NH don't have property taxes. Other communities have very low property taxes. Some communities have high property taxes. However, even in many of those communities, you can live in a mobile home on some land and pay around $1,000 per year in property taxes. Then there are the super rich with huge houses in high tax property tax communities that pay over $15,000 per year in property taxes, but that is true in most states.Both states were below the 10.4 percent national average; only four states had a lower combined tax rate than New Hampshire.
A person living in Manchester, N.H., pays a 2.2 percent property tax, but residents of New Hampshire's only island town of New Castle pay only a 0.6 percent property tax rate.
Many Massachusetts towns don't fall too far from New Hampshire's property tax levels. Salem residents face a 1.5 percent property tax rate; homeowners in Milford pay a 1.1 percent property tax.
"Every state has its tax issues," Moody said. "New Hampshire doesn't have a sales tax, but they do have an 8 percent tax on lodging and meals. So, someone who enjoys going out to nice restaurants often is going to see themselves paying more."
I don't think Free Staters took into account that they picked a state right next to Massachusetts. I like the idea of the FSP, but apparently, so do liberals from Massachusetts who screwed up their own state, who can't figure out why things went horribly wrong, and then moved into New Hampshire like locusts moving from one field of crops to another.