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Technical Explanation
Here is a detailed description of the law on this subject,
of interest to tax lawyers and tax accountants.
This eliminates your obligation to pay income tax, not
just in the way just mentioned, but in another way, because even if the
deemed interest provisions of IRS Publication 535 mentioned at the "USA"
tab in the left margin of this page, or, in Canada, if Section 80.4(3)
did not exist, the consequences of Section 80.4(1) would be very mild,
as shown here:
Disregarding Section 80.4(3), if you earn $50,000.00 per
year, for example, you have a taxable income of about $800 (3% per annum
on $50,000 advanced throughout the year, with an average duration of each
installment being 6 months). Since you have a Basic Exemption on your income
tax for over $8,000, you do not have to pay any income tax at all.
The next year, you have a taxable income of $1,500 in
respect of the first $50,000 earned (3% of $50,000) and of another $800.00
for next years earnings. Again, your taxable income of $2,300.00 does not
incur any income tax liability.
Eventually you reach the point where you become taxable,
but the amount is extremely small:
For the first six (6) years, you would owe no income tax
at all (on taxable income of $1,500 x 5 + $750 = $8,200). Thereafter the
income tax liability would increase so that after eleven (11) years, your
income tax payable would have risen to $1,500.00 per year, based on deemed
income of $15,750.00 ($1,500 x 10 + $750 = $15,750).
But even this small amount only applies if you do not
invest any of your earnings. If you invest any of your earnings, the deemed
3% interest is deductible from your taxable income. If you invest all of
your earnings, you pay no income tax at all unless you have taxable income
from those investments.
Moreover, the small amount of tax that would be payable
would not have to be paid unless you wished to pay it. It is not a tax
that is withheld from any money you are paid, and we show you how to become
judgment proof so that paying income taxes becomes optional. (You decide
whether you want to subsidize the government's bailout programs, not only
the ones you have heard about, but the ones you haven't heard about because
the government has been successful at keeping them secret.)
But all this is merely an addition to your first layer
of protection, since under the deemed interest provisions of IRS Publication
535 mentioned at the "USA" tab in the left margin of this page,
and, in Canada, in Section 80.4(3) of the Income Tax Act, there
would be no deemed interest and so no income tax liability at all.
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