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junaru | 3 months ago

To me this looks like getting hacked, donating to some public non-profit, deduct it via taxes (essentially spending nothing) and spin it online as a positive.

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ritzaco|3 months ago

I've met a few people who genuinely believe that 'tax deductible' equates to 'essentially spending nothing' or somehow equate that the amount you donate would be an amount you would otherwise give to the Government in taxes so from your perspective it doesn't change anything.

This is definitely not the case. If you make $100 profit and you would have had to pay 20% corporate tax, then you pay $20 in taxes, you'd be left with $80 to buy chocolate or whatever you want.

If you donate $20 and deduct it from your profit, then your profit is now calculated at $80. So you pay $16 in taxes. So you saved $4 but spent $20, so you're $16 dollars down and now you only have $64 for chocolate, so not 'essentially nothing'.

tobyhinloopen|3 months ago

What if I buy chocolate as a corporate gift to my clients?! /jk

retsibsi|3 months ago

> deduct it via taxes (essentially spending nothing)

Unless you're positing some very specific, unusual situation, this isn't how tax deductibility works. The dollar amount of a tax deductible donation is subtracted from your taxable income, not from your tax bill. So you're getting a discount on the donation equal to your marginal tax rate.

tobyhinloopen|3 months ago

> deduct it via taxes (essentially spending nothing)

That's not how tax deduction works.

laylower|3 months ago

Even if it were, it'd be much more than anything others that got hacked have been doing..

saberience|3 months ago

That’s not how tax deductions work because a tax deduction doesn’t give you the full amount of your donation back it only reduces your taxable income, not your tax bill dollar-for-dollar.

Example:

You earn $100,000.

You donate $10,000 to a qualifying charity.

You can now deduct that $10,000, i.e. you’ll be taxed as if you earned $90,000, not $100,000.

If your marginal tax rate is 30%, you’ll save 30% of $10,000 = $3,000 in taxes. So you’re still out $7,000 in real money.

yazmeya|3 months ago

Though if that 100K to 90K move had actually changed your tax bracket, you'd stand to maybe save a bit more.