I think this is mostly a US thing. Why use yearly salary? You’re not paid once a year, are you? Most likely once a month. Referencing monthly salary makes much more sense.

“I’m making 50k”. Great, now I have to guess - dollars? Monthly? Yearly? If yearly then what’s the monthly paycheck? Net? Gross?

  • @CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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    -21 year ago

    You’re just repeating the same thing you said in the last comment and ignoring everything I wrote. Nowhere did I say that you need to list every bracket. I said people don’t talk about “their tax bracket” because that isn’t a thing and that isn’t their tax bracket. It’s just a percentage that some potentially miniscule amount of tax that may apply to a further potentially tiny fraction of income and in no way represents how much they’re paying in taxes.

    • @pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      and in no way represents how much they’re paying in taxes.

      It does actually, because if you are any amount into tax bracket n, you are already implicitly paying the maximum taxes of brackets 1 to n-1

      For example in Canada, federal tax brackets are:

      • 15% up to $53,359
      • 20.5% between $53,359 and $106,717
      • 29% between $165,430 up to $235,675 …

      If I say I am in the third tax bracket, that already implicitly informs you of how much taxes I am paying for the first and second brackets, because by being in the third bracket I already am paying the maximum amount for brackets one and two. These are now fixed values implicitly.

      If I am in the third tax bracket, you know I am paying at minimum $8003.85 + $10938.39 (the maximums of bracket 1 and 2 combined), and at most another $20,371 above that.

      No more, no less, the “third tax bracket” is paying between $18,942.24 and $39,313.24 per year.

      So yes, it is a specific and fixed “range” of taxes.