Jake Mortenson
@jm0rt.bsky.social
on here: tax economist
out there: also a tax economist, but other things too
http://www.JacobMortenson.com
out there: also a tax economist, but other things too
http://www.JacobMortenson.com
Reposted by Jake Mortenson
What can your advisor do? They almost certainly can't help you with the most competitive places on your list, but they can reach out to places that may have thought you were out of reach and let them know you are gettable.
December 20, 2024 at 1:56 PM
What can your advisor do? They almost certainly can't help you with the most competitive places on your list, but they can reach out to places that may have thought you were out of reach and let them know you are gettable.
(yes)
Check out that JHR article I linked to. Covers lots of these unit of observation questions, and the ramifications for income inequality measures
For ex, this probably only includes individuals who file tax returns or are claimed on tax returns as dependents, which misses about 10% of adults
Check out that JHR article I linked to. Covers lots of these unit of observation questions, and the ramifications for income inequality measures
For ex, this probably only includes individuals who file tax returns or are claimed on tax returns as dependents, which misses about 10% of adults
December 9, 2024 at 4:33 PM
(yes)
Check out that JHR article I linked to. Covers lots of these unit of observation questions, and the ramifications for income inequality measures
For ex, this probably only includes individuals who file tax returns or are claimed on tax returns as dependents, which misses about 10% of adults
Check out that JHR article I linked to. Covers lots of these unit of observation questions, and the ramifications for income inequality measures
For ex, this probably only includes individuals who file tax returns or are claimed on tax returns as dependents, which misses about 10% of adults
I assume it is neither, given the use of “adjusted gross income”,
Presumably it is a “tax unit”
davidsplinter.com/LarrimoreMor...
Presumably it is a “tax unit”
davidsplinter.com/LarrimoreMor...
davidsplinter.com
December 9, 2024 at 4:03 PM
I assume it is neither, given the use of “adjusted gross income”,
Presumably it is a “tax unit”
davidsplinter.com/LarrimoreMor...
Presumably it is a “tax unit”
davidsplinter.com/LarrimoreMor...
Were you a boy scout? Looks like a pinewood derby car.
December 3, 2024 at 4:57 AM
Were you a boy scout? Looks like a pinewood derby car.
The TCJA meaningfully increased the standard deduction, reducing the share of taxpayers who itemize their deductions. This reduced the use of charitable giving deductions (an itemized deduction). Han et al. find that charitable giving declined as a result: www.nber.org/papers/w32737
[4/n]
[4/n]
Tax Incentives for Charitable Giving: New Findings from the TCJA
Founded in 1920, the NBER is a private, non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to conducting economic research and to disseminating research findings among academics, public policy makers, an...
www.nber.org
November 24, 2024 at 10:28 PM
The TCJA meaningfully increased the standard deduction, reducing the share of taxpayers who itemize their deductions. This reduced the use of charitable giving deductions (an itemized deduction). Han et al. find that charitable giving declined as a result: www.nber.org/papers/w32737
[4/n]
[4/n]
Hi Pierce, would appreciate being added to this.
November 20, 2024 at 2:18 PM
Hi Pierce, would appreciate being added to this.
Some of the provisions affecting multinational entities — notably GILTI and FDII — tighten or become less generous (respectively) at the end of 2025. This paper, by Smith et al., studies the effect of these provisions and other corporate tax changes in TCJA: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.... [3/n]
Tax Policy and Investment in a Global Economy
We evaluate the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Combining reduced-form estimates from tax data with a global investment model, we estimate responses, identify param
papers.ssrn.com
November 20, 2024 at 2:07 AM
Some of the provisions affecting multinational entities — notably GILTI and FDII — tighten or become less generous (respectively) at the end of 2025. This paper, by Smith et al., studies the effect of these provisions and other corporate tax changes in TCJA: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.... [3/n]