• the_joeba@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    They will never understand that. I knew a guy who refused a raise because it would put him in the next tax bracket. I didn’t even try to explain it.

    • stebo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      44 minutes ago

      My mom got fired from her job after 30 years of service (because the factory closed). She received a severance pay, paid out over 6 months, and told me she wouldn’t be looking for a new job during that time because she’d have to pay double the taxes. I was like yeah but… you’d also be earning double the money?? I would understand that she wanted to take a break for a couple of months but if taxes were the reason, that just doesn’t make sense.

    • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      When I was in my early 20s there were a few personal finance things like this I didn’t understand. Here are a couple examples:

      1. I refused a credit card limit increase because I thought that it was a trap to get me to spend more. I didn’t understand FICO scores are partly determined by “amount of credit” and “credit utilized”. I likely cause myself to later spend more money on higher interest rates when I got a loan because my credit score could have been better.
      2. I was mildly upset I got $1000 as a bonus instead of a pay income because I thought that bonuses were “taxed at a higher rate” when instead they are simply “withheld at a higher rate” and it all washes out in the end when you pay your taxes at the end of the year.

      But I grew up and learned these things in my 20s and didn’t carry those mistakes into later adulthood.