Salary Adjustment...
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- 27 Responses
- nick0
derek im curious, how do you not pay income tax?
unless of course you don't make any money... which then makes sense..
- murmur0
Just a side note. Canada does not have, nor has it ever had "Free Health Care" You pay on a sliding scale based on your income. If your income falls under a certain amount.. $16,700 per year you pay nothing and receive the same level of care as if you earned $100,000 an year and paid $150 a month on health care.
- derek20050
canada is fucked with that.
lucky i dont pay income tax woo!
- uhohseangettio0
i am 25% native nick. and i make more then you.
- superbaka0
ive been in situations where i work OT, get bumped up to the next highest income bracket (withholdings are calculated weekly), and actually take home less than the week where i worked less hours. rare, but it can happen that way. of course, in april it evens out.
- derek20050
fucking martin!
- derek20050
chris.. where you work?
you look like jeedub! lol
- jevad0
"my entire raise went to gov taxes"
how the fuck does that work?!
- Blofeldt0
Deja Vu
- Terminal270
yeah i don't see how thats possible. Sure your not getting ass f*cked by 'the man'
- mrdobolina0
there's no way your entire raise went to taxes. no matter what country you live in.
- getseen0
"my entire raise went to gov taxes"
how the fuck does that work?!
jevad
(Feb 15 05, 09:20)
--------------------------------National Healthcare?
- tkmeister0
maybe he went one up on the tax bracket, that can screw up.
- k0na_an0k0
thats impossible. unless when you worked there on your tax info you filled it out so the chunk of your check goes there so thta at the end of the year you can get more back, evne then, not 100% of it should go to taxes.
i think either your boss is fucking you or you just can't read.
- warheros0
actually it is possible if it's less than 30%. which is what the gov't takes from you.
- propa0
It effectively can happen depending on your tax bracket.
first $35,595 first 16%
over $35,595 up to $71,190 22%
over $71,190 up to $115,739 26%
over $115,739 29%so if you make 34,500 after tax you make 28,980
so just say you get a raise to 37,000 after tax you make 28,860
Now this is a pretty low raise but it kinda could happen.
- k0na_an0k0
that is why canada sux
- e-pill0
all that money you just received goes and pays for your ahem - 'free healthcare'
- Luckypp0
Actually it is IMpossible even with tax brackets and National Healthcare, as they take a percentage, and regardless you would still recieve some extra cash.
- grafholic0
heh that happened to me once.
sucks when the small raise you finally receive makes no difference in the actual amount in your bank account.