> So he’s going to selflessly donate it to himself to save himself from taxes? What a hero.
You don't really "save yourself from taxes" by donating money to charity.
Option A: sell stock for $100, pay taxes of $20, spend $80 on yourself
Option B: donate stock of $100 to charity, and spend $0 on yourself
Which of these options leaves Gates with more money in his pocket to spend on himself?
Giving money away doesn't save you from taxes on your income; you just forego the income entirely. The money is gone. It's no longer yours. Why would you be paying taxes on it?
>You don't really "save yourself from taxes" by donating money to charity.
That's not really true if you have sufficiently appreciated assets and are in a high tax bracket. You can donate those appreciated assets and collect an annuity from some percentage of the face value donation and basically be shielded from any capital gains.
I mean, maybe? But long-term capital gains are a low tax bracket, so the “in a high tax bracket” part doesn’t apply.
I’m curious what portion of his wealth is even taxable. Remember that Bush Jr did a “capital gains forgiveness” year with 0% long term gains rate. I expect many many many of the wealthy sold and then rebought all their major assets that year.
You don't really "save yourself from taxes" by donating money to charity.
Option A: sell stock for $100, pay taxes of $20, spend $80 on yourself Option B: donate stock of $100 to charity, and spend $0 on yourself
Which of these options leaves Gates with more money in his pocket to spend on himself?
Giving money away doesn't save you from taxes on your income; you just forego the income entirely. The money is gone. It's no longer yours. Why would you be paying taxes on it?