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No income tax OR state tax in Alaska?

Started by kola, June 03, 2008, 10:41 PM NHFT

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kola

whoa..I didnt know this:

.."Alaska has the lowest individual tax burden in the United States,[29] and is one of only five states with no state sales tax and one of seven states that do not levy an individual income tax."

kola

Jim Johnson

Alaska pays people to live there.  They steal profits from oil companies to pay for the domination of their "citizens".

Pat McCotter

Bill Grennon's economic rent at work!

===========================

Alaska residents will get annual oil royalty dividend of $1,654 each
The Associated Press
Published: September 19, 2007

JUNEAU, Alaska: Nearly every Alaskan will soon receive a check for $1,654 (€1,183), their share of the state's oil riches, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin announced.

The dividend checks are derived from the state's oil royalty investment program and distributed each year to eligible residents — just for living here for a full calendar year.

Slightly more than 600,000 men, women and children in 248 communities will receive the dividend this year, according to the Revenue Department. The state's estimated population is just over 670,000 people.

Anyone who has lived in Alaska for a full calendar year can apply for the money — including children. Of those receiving checks this year, about 41 percent — or 244,695 of the state's residents — were born in Alaska.

"I want you guys to invest this wisely," Palin told the large crowd that gathered Wednesday for the announcement of this year's dividend in Valdez, the terminus of the state's 800-mile (1,287-kilometer) trans-Alaska oil pipeline.

It is a perk that separates Alaska from the rest of the U.S. and was recently parodied in "The Simpsons Movie," which prominently features the television cartoon family's journey to Alaska.

The movie depicts Alaska almost as a separate country. As Homer Simpson crosses the border with Canada, he's greeted by a customs agent who says, "Welcome to Alaska," then hands Homer a wad of cash, saying every Alaskan gets a stack of bills so oil companies can exploit the environment.

But for many residents, the check is no joke.

It means getting caught up on bills and supplementing income that for some is a week-to-week living in Alaska, where the cost of living is high due in part because of its distance from shipping centers in other parts of the United States.

In Galena, a town of 600 residents located 250 miles (400 kilometers) west of Fairbanks, air taxi pilot Colin Brown pilot said the money will help cover rising fuel costs that have beset the state's isolated rural villages. Brown says he pays about $4.70 for a gallon of gasoline, about $2 per gallon more than national average, according to the Energy Department's most recent data.

Others use the bonus to supplement their subsistent lifestyles.

"A lot of times village people will spend it on fishnets to renew their equipment that's worn out," he said.

The state established the Alaska Permanent Fund in 1976 after North Slope oil was discovered. Dividends have been paid since 1982, ranging from $331 to a record high of $1,963 in 2000. Last year's dividend check was $1,106.

The fund is valued at a near-record $38.7 billion (€27.69 billion), with total returns at 17.1 percent in the fiscal year that ended June 30. In the last fiscal year, the fund earned $622,000 an hour.

Dividend totals are not directly tied to the fund's total value or robust oil prices, said fund spokeswoman Laura Achee. Oil prices, which topped $80 a barrel this week, can boost the fund's principal, but the money must be invested. Payouts then get calculated on a five-year average of investment income.

The fund's stock investments include high-profile brands such as Pepsico Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Apple Inc., along with North Slope oil producers Exxon Mobil Corp., ConocoPhillips and BP PLC.

More than $15.2 billion (€10.88 billion) has been distributed to eligible residents since the dividend program began, five years after oil began flowing in the state's pipeline 30 years ago.

If a resident has received a check every year since the first was issued in 1982, their total take in the program would be $27,536.

___

On the Net:

Alaska Permanent Fund: http://www.pfd.state.ak.us


kola

sell your soul for the almighty dollar.

no thanks.

a beautiful state... corrupted.

how depressing.

kola

feralfae

A part of living in Alaska, due to the way it was established as a state, is that the people as a whole own a part of the natural resources, mostly the hydrocarbons.  In fact, on a recent trip there, I found out that each and every Alaskan owns about One Million worth of natural gas.

Because of native and early settler claims, I have often wondered what would be a better way to divvy up these natural resource revenues from public lands and sometimes public waters.  No one forces oil producers to enter into any agreements, the records are open to the public, and the native communal claims had to be honored, since they already had traditional land use rights.  Or perhaps their claims, since they were not recorded at any courthouse, nor were the early settler's stake-outs recorded on paper anywhere, should have all been ignored.

I'd be interested to hear some alternative solutions.
ff


doobie

Where is our oil in NH?  Can we keep it for ourselves?

Lloyd Danforth


Jim Johnson

Quote from: doobie on June 04, 2008, 08:33 AM NHFT
Where is our oil in NH?  Can we keep it for ourselves?

Oil is called trees in New Hampshire... and yes you can.

They are 100% solar powered, organic and renewable.

mackler

Not to mention that Alaska is not burdened with the oppressively hot winters that New Hampshire suffers from.

John Edward Mercier

Quote from: Facilitator to the Icon on June 04, 2008, 11:37 AM NHFT
Quote from: doobie on June 04, 2008, 08:33 AM NHFT
Where is our oil in NH?  Can we keep it for ourselves?

Oil is called trees in New Hampshire... and yes you can.

They are 100% solar powered, organic and renewable.

So is oil... the cycle is just much longer.