"Linsanity" has a new name: "Lincome." Knicks to Rockets move saves Jeremy Lin $3 million in taxes
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With his trade from the New York Knicks to the
Houston Rockets, NBA superstar Jeremy Lin, who turned the Big Apple
crazy for "Linsanity" last year, is going to cash in during his stay in
Texas more than he could imagine in New York.
According to Americans for Tax Reform the
trade will save him over $1 million a year in local and state taxes,
raising the question why there isn't a line of superstar athletes to
play in Texas.
"Fast forward a decade: the most talented
baseball players, football players, and basketball players will be
leading teams to victory based in Florida, Texas, or the other states
with no income tax," ATR President Grover Norquist told Secrets.
He suggested that if President Obama wins
reelection, sports stars might seek refuge overseas because of taxes.
"If given a second term, Obama's tax increases will push both investment
capital and talented individuals to other countries," he told us.
Lin, the 23-year-old point guard who helped
the Knicks to wins in his first six starts, has signed a three-year,
$25.1 million contract with the Rockets. In New York he would have paid a
state income tax of 8.82 percent and a city tax of $3.876 percent.
Neither Texas nor Houston have income taxes. As a result, Lin will save
$1,040,416.04 a year, said ATR.
ATR highlighted the Lin contract to make the
point that low-tax states are having an easier time in the struggling
economy. "Nine no-income tax states have consistently outperformed the
high-tax states, like New York, over the past decade," said ATR.
- HarleyCharley 2012/07/18 20:48:25Undecided+1a lot of rich people are leaving states that tax too much...reply
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but they need to leave their democratic policies in that state, and not turn the new state blue.reply













