Inteligencia y Seguridad Frente Externo En Profundidad Economia y Finanzas Transparencia
  En Parrilla Medio Ambiente Sociedad High Tech Contacto
En Parrilla  
 
24/09/2011 | US- Who gets to be a millionaire?

Los Angeles Times Staff

President Obama's economic plan has drawn much attention, especially his proposal of a tax on wealthier individuals. A front-page article Sunday by Washington bureau reporter Jim Puzzanghera said Obama would propose that "people earning more than $1 million a year pay at least the same tax rate as middle-class earners." The headline on the article summed it up this way: "Obama to propose tax increase for millionaires"

 

Reader Mitch Paradise of Los Angeles found the headline misleading. "Obama isn't really proposing a 'tax increase for millionaires,' is he?," Paradise emailed. "One can become a 'millionaire' pretty much regardless of income, can't one? In this case, we're really talking about annual adjusted gross income, aren't we? So why be misleading in your headlines and subheadlines?"

Also, in a Sept. 20 editorial, "The 'Buffett rule,' and more," The Times described Obama's deficit-cutting proposal as including "a proposal to make millionaires pay at least as high a tax rate as working- and middle-class Americans." The term was used similarly in a Sept. 20 news article and in a Sept. 22 letter to the editor. A Sept. 19 article, headlined "Taxes, wars at core of deficit plan," used different language in defining the "Buffett rule": "No one earning more than $1 million a year should be taxed at a lower rate than middle-income households."

Senior copy desk chief Mark McGonigle responds:

I agree with the reader. In fact, after receiving Paradise's question, I sent a note to our copy editors reminding them of the correct use of "millionaire." In 2004, I wrote the following:

"Let's not use 'millionaires' as shorthand for people who make more than a million dollars a year. 'Millionaire' has to do with assets, not income. And in some cases, using the word leads to something that's downright wrong."

The dictionary definition of millionaire is "a person whose wealth comes to at least a million dollars, pounds, francs, euros, etc." The definition has nothing to say about income. (Fun fact: There's also a similar definition for "millionairess," I guess to distinguish the wealthy female from the wealthy male.)

In the case of the Sunday article, I think we should have said "wealthy," which also may have more to do with assets than income but seems less specific. Or, "Obama to propose tax increase on top incomes."

Los Angeles Times (Estados Unidos)

 


Otras Notas Relacionadas... ( Records 1 to 10 of 2884 )
fecha titulo
30/01/2014 Qué ha hecho y qué le falta por hacer a Obama en su segundo mandato
18/12/2013 El hombre que derrotó a Obama
13/12/2013 US - The budget deal and Washington’s new politics of compromise
10/12/2013 Limitar los riesgos
20/11/2013 Otro punto de vista sobre JFK
18/11/2013 Who are the REAL extremists: The tea party or Obama and the New Democrats?
18/11/2013 Can a crippled HHS react in time to a killer virus?
11/11/2013 EEUU - Moderados contra el Tea Party
10/11/2013 Obama, en manos de sus enemigos
10/11/2013 The Coming U.S.-China Clash


Otras Notas del Autor
fecha
Título
28/04/2014|
22/05/2012|
07/03/2012|
07/03/2012|
20/08/2011|
15/04/2011|
13/09/2010|
23/05/2010|
20/10/2007|

ver + notas
 
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Freedom House