Joe S.
Stunt Coordinator
Eric,
Again the problem is there is NO answer to your question, and by trying to delve into tax law and what the politicians think (???) there is no way to keep clear of the no politics discussion. There is NO line you magically cross from comfortable to wealthy. It is a subjective state of mind, not a goal line your income magically crosses. It is something politicians use to make platitudes that ultimately mean nothing (hence why they use the term so much.) In the same way they like to describe us as "safer" than before, how exactly do you quantify safety? Hence, why they throw the term around so much (and that's not political, every single politician in Washington uses that line.)
Your question is basically the same as me asking quantitatively what does "estatic" mean and how is it different from "happy"? It is just like happy, only more so. Wealthy is just like well off, only more so. After that, it is so subjective to each individual that it's almost meaningless.
I answered your question twice. The highest income bracket in the USA tax code is $250,000+. Or you can define welathy as (assets + income) - (debt + expenses).
What else do you want? There are no more answers to your question unless you can find them yourself...
Again the problem is there is NO answer to your question, and by trying to delve into tax law and what the politicians think (???) there is no way to keep clear of the no politics discussion. There is NO line you magically cross from comfortable to wealthy. It is a subjective state of mind, not a goal line your income magically crosses. It is something politicians use to make platitudes that ultimately mean nothing (hence why they use the term so much.) In the same way they like to describe us as "safer" than before, how exactly do you quantify safety? Hence, why they throw the term around so much (and that's not political, every single politician in Washington uses that line.)
Your question is basically the same as me asking quantitatively what does "estatic" mean and how is it different from "happy"? It is just like happy, only more so. Wealthy is just like well off, only more so. After that, it is so subjective to each individual that it's almost meaningless.
I answered your question twice. The highest income bracket in the USA tax code is $250,000+. Or you can define welathy as (assets + income) - (debt + expenses).
What else do you want? There are no more answers to your question unless you can find them yourself...