Tax on active traders in Germany

In America the tax rate is determined by holding period. If trade held 1 year, capital gains treatment. If less than 1 year, ordinary income.

For stocks, I thought -1 year was short-term capital gain, +1 year long-term capital gain?
 
Then why are they listed as two-different line items on the 1099? Fucking IRS inefficiencies!

Though short term capital gains and ordinary income are taxed at the same rate, "other things" apply to ordinary income... social security and medicare taxes, for example.

The US tax code is 70,000 pages (or is it 80,000 now?)... anything but "fair"... much of it HORSE SHIT... with special interest carve-outs, sadly.
 
In Spain there was a system similar to the US (differentiation between more/less than one year holding) up until 2014 iirc, but currently everything is taxed as short-term gains rates, between 19% and 23% (the rates were lowered a few points when the law changed).
 
In Spain there was a system similar to the US (differentiation between more/less than one year holding) up until 2014 iirc, but currently everything is taxed as short-term gains rates, between 19% and 23% (the rates were lowered a few points when the law changed).
But are you sure Spain does not tax trading income as business income if volume, frequency etc. surpasses a certain threshold (to be assessed subjectively by the tax authorities)?
 
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