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The Truth About The “FairTax”

First off, FairTax was created by Tom Cruise’s wacky scientologists.

For those who never heard about it, the FairTax is a national retail sales tax that would replace the entire current federal tax system. It was originally devised by the Church of Scientology in the early 1990s as a way to get rid of the Internal Revenue Service, with which the church was then at war (at the time the IRS refused to recognize it as a legitimate religion). The Scientologists’ idea was that since almost all states have sales taxes, replacing federal taxes with the same sort of tax would allow them to collect the federal government’s revenue and thereby get rid of their hated enemy, the IRS.

The FairTax is a shell game tax hike.

Boortz and Linder contend that actual consumer prices would not rise under the NRST, but regardless, their proposed “tax-inclusive rate” is a 30 percent sales tax as most Americans understand it. But even this 30 percent number probably underestimates what Boortz and Linder’s proposal would entail. In fact, in order to meet their requirements, the effective tax rate could be as high as an astonishing 56 percent (tax-exclusive).

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106 Responses to “The Truth About The “FairTax””

  1. SaveFarris says:

    “Conservatives on the other hand, see problems and think about how we should fix them. That doesn’t say we’ve got all the answers or that all the solutions will work – but it’s more than just throwing your hands up in the air and saying “tax happens”" … or so a wise man once said.

  2. Tim Fuller says:

    Thought I’d share this with you guys. I don’t get over here to read you as much as I ought to Oliver, but I know you’re one of the good guys.

    Here’s something of mine that seems to be a rather big hit today. It’s something I know you guys would get a kick out of.

    How to get a Republican Horny:

    http://thetimtimes.com/?p=108

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/timtimes/1277152453/

  3. Jay says:

    It bothers me to see a guy as smart as Bruce Bartlett engaging in such fallacies like bringing Scientologists into the equation as though they were the architects of the national sales tax. It’s especially ironic considering that he favored a consumption tax in this piece he wrote in 2002.

    The sales tax or Fairtax is a good first step in creating a discussion to overhaul our current tax system which is simply a mess, instead of tweaking it and adding to the mess with more and more credits and deductions.

    What kills me is how liberals, who are forever railing about “the rich”, dismiss the notion of a consumption or sales tax in any form despite the fact that rich people consume far more in resources than anybody else (land, fuel, goods, services, etc).

    Liberals love to rail about corporate welfare, but is the current tax structure that allows such welfare to be inserted into bills quite easily creating tax loopholes and write-offs that make no sense.

    Why are Democrats afraid of this discussion?

  4. mg says:

    Fair my ass. This is a regressive nightmare which will destroy the middle class once and for all. Why do these zipwads hate the middle class so much?

  5. Quaker in a Basement says:

    Why are Democrats afraid of this discussion?

    (We’ll ignore the fact theat Mr. Bartlett is NOT a Democrat and proceed anyway.)

    Who said anything about being afraid? The “Fair Tax” is usually dishonestly presented and its flaws glossed over by its proponents.

    Tax reform? Sure, let’s talk. Phony solutions that won’t work? Don’t waste our time.

  6. Duder says:

    You had me at “Boortz and Linder contend…”

  7. A national sales tax would hit the poor disproportionally, which is probably why Republicans like it so much.

  8. “What kills me is how liberals, who are forever railing about “the rich”, dismiss the notion of a consumption or sales tax in any form despite the fact that rich people consume far more in resources than anybody else (land, fuel, goods, services, etc).”

    They consume less as a percentage of their wealth. Therefore, they would be hit less.

    “Why are Democrats afraid of this discussion?”

    Why are you so fucking stupid?

    We are discussing it. It doesn’t take a long discussion to conclude this is a bad proposal system.

  9. mdhawk says:

    Actually, there is a consideration here that people are not taking into account.

    Yes, a consumption tax would hit the poor disproportionately. That is a direct hit.

    But there is also an indirect cost to the poor as well.

    The vast majority of charitable contributions occur as a result of the tax deductions that result from the contribution. Rich people plan for charitable contributions in their testamentary documents, as well as annually contribute millions to charities that pick up the slack in providing services to the poor, elderly etc. that government fails to.

    Switching to a consumption tax/national sales tax would not only hit the poor directly, but will also virtually destroy the network of charities throughout the country, both because funds will dry up, but also because (with no IRS to make rulings) practically eliminate the difference between businesses and charities/non-profits.

  10. Jay says:

    They consume less as a percentage of their wealth. Therefore, they would be hit less.

    That’s the most idiotic thing I have ever read. They have more. Therefore, they will consume more. As such, they will pay more. It doesn’t matter what percentage it is of their wealth.

    You type something that dumb and you have the balls to call me stupid?

    Quaker, when was the last time any prominent Democrat proposed major tax reform? Any reform that is proposed is merely attacked. I have never seen any alternatives. I’m prepared to discuss the issue. Do you have any ideas?

  11. midderpidge says:

    Would the fair tax include stocks, bonds, mutual funds, investment real estate and other investment instruments that rich people like to purchase with their excess earnings?

  12. Why are Democrats afraid of this discussion?

    Why are Republicans so delusional that they think people are “afraid” of anything they think is stupid? We’re “afraid” of Fred Thompson. We’re “afraid” of the surge. We’re “afraid” of the Fair Tax.

    I’m afraid you’re getting a bit boring, Jay.

  13. Jay says:

    Why are Republicans so delusional that they think people are “afraid” of anything they think is stupid?

    So you think tax reform is stupid. Wonderful.

  14. frameone says:

    Wow, Jay. Doesn’t look to me like he’s saying tax reform is stupid. I guess you need to hone your reading comprehension skills.

    At the same time, how the fuck is the Fair Tax fair? On it’s own, it’s totally regressive. Take the example Bartlett uses : If the Fair tax adds .30 to an item that costs $1, a person with $2 to spend is going to feel that tax more than a person with $10 to spend.

    Bartlett makes this point exactly but Jay comes back with this stupidity: “rich people consume far more in resources than anybody else (land, fuel, goods, services, etc).”

    Um, doofus, that doesn’t make land, fuel, goods and services with a sales tax tacked on any less expensive for poor people proportional to their income.

    What a moron.

  15. So you think tax reform is stupid.

    Yes, Jay, that’s exactly what I said. Did you get that bike for your 12th birthday this weekend like you had been asking for? The one without the training wheels?

  16. Rheinhard says:

    I continually wonder if Jay just pretends to be this stupid for the sake of squeezing the v1.0 wingnut talking points out, or if he really is that stupid.

    Yes, in this unfair “Fair Tax” in absolute numbners a rich person buying a yacht will pay more in tax than a poor person buying a new water heater to replace the rusted out one in their basement.

    But in the case of the rich person, they will STILL have cash left over from the purchase they CHOSE to make with DISPOSABLE INCOME, while the poor schmuck will now have to decide whether to pay the gas bill or his kid’s doctor bill this month, because with the tax on the necessity he HAD to buy, he now can’t afford both.

  17. Wilbur says:

    Nice try, Rheinhard, but you know that Jay will just read as far as the second paragraph, say to himself “See, I was right,” and then stop reading.

    To the simple-minded. the world really is that simple.

  18. Duros62 says:

    What would this so-called Fair Tax do to McDonald’s Dollar Menu? That is where it will impact the most lower-income Americans.

    Tax reform=good. Across-the-board-dumbass-ideas=not so much.

  19. Quaker in a Basement says:

    Quaker, when was the last time any prominent Democrat proposed major tax reform?

    Beats me.

    When was the last time any Republican proposed tax reform that wasn’t a load of snake oil?

  20. Quaker in a Basement says:

    Keep in mind that the same people who are pushing a 30 percent (or more) increase in the cost of everything are the same people who wail about the inflationary effect of raising the minimum wage.

    When you get beyond Bartlett’s account of the Scientology link, he’s dead on about the flaws in the so-called Fair Tax.

  21. frameone says:

    “Tax reform=good. Across-the-board-dumbass-ideas=not so much.”

    I think this just about sums it up. I wonder if there’s some larger generalization to draw from this?

    Liberals believe this:
    Finding Workable Solutions to Problems = Good

    Conservatives believe this:
    Across-the-board-dumbass-ideas=EFFING GO FOR IT.

    How else does one explain
    The Fair Tax, Iraq, Massive and Unaccountable Government Eavesdropping, Open Ended Detention in Guantanamo, Social Security “Reform,” etc. etc.

  22. Jay says:

    August, I just pulled that accusation that you think tax reform is stupid out of my ass. I figured since that’s what idiots like Frameone do all the time, that it was acceptable practice around here.

    Yes, in this unfair “Fair Tax” in absolute numbners a rich person buying a yacht will pay more in tax than a poor person buying a new water heater to replace the rusted out one in their basement.

    Well that’s based upon the Fair Tax. I don’t necessarily support the Fair Tax. However, I do support a consumption tax, which by the way, can be made progressive, contrary to the rantings of a complete and total dumbass like Frameone.

  23. frameone says:

    Jesus, Jay, if you don’t support a Fair tax why the fuck would you suggest that it’s “a good first step in creating a discussion to overhaul our current tax system”?

    How Socratic of you. What an idiot.

  24. frameone says:

    How about just saying: I don’t support the “fair tax” because it’s regressive unlike a consumption tax which can be made progressive?

    Of course, you’re sort of well versed in changing horses mid-stream, aren’t ya?

    But since you’ve brought it up, how does one make a consumption tax progressive?

  25. Me: “They consume less as a percentage of their wealth. Therefore, they would be hit less.”

    Jay: “That’s the most idiotic thing I have ever read.”

    You are too fucking stupid to figure out if something is smart or not, so your opinion in meaningless.

    Poor people spend more as a percentage of their income, therefore a consumption tax would hit them harder.

    Right now the tax system is more or less balances:

    http://media3.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/graphic/2007/04/13/GR2007041301521.gif

    You want it so the poor would pay a higher percentage of their income as a tax than the rich do. That would hurt the economy, something the right always bitches about when it comes to taxes.

  26. August: “Why are Republicans so delusional that they think people are “afraid” of anything they think is stupid?”

    Jay: “So you think tax reform is stupid. Wonderful.”

    Shut the fuck up, you ignorant piece of shit. You have lost any right to be heard in this debate, because you are either completely fucking stupid, or so intellectually dishonest that your opinions are meaningless.

  27. Jay says:

    Shut the fuck up, you ignorant piece of shit.

    Oooh. You must get such a rise talking so tough in the comments section of a blog!

  28. Quaker in a Basement says:

    However, I do support a consumption tax,

    In addition to, or in place of, the current income tax?

  29. Jadegold says:

    Jay is inherently ignorant.

    But a progressive consumption tax might be a good idea. It would actually produce the desired result of rewarding people for saving.

    But you have to understand the Repugs would never go for this as their true aim is a free ride for the wealthiest.

  30. Jadegold says:

    I should add a progressive consumption tax would be pretty tough to monitor accurately.

  31. Jay says:

    In addition to, or in place of, the current income tax?

    In place of. I think the entire current tax code needs to be scrapped.

    The way you can make it progressive is by levying the tax on total consumption, rather than individual purchases. People would calculate their total income, subtract their total savings and pay taxes on the difference. The first $20-$25K of consumption would be tax-free (allowing for lower income people to not have to worry about taxes on things like food, clothing and other necessities), and from there the tax rates would be progressive rather than flat. The more you spent and the less you saved, the higher your tax rate would be.

  32. Mike says:

    They consume less as a percentage of their wealth. Therefore, they would be hit less.”

    That’s the most idiotic thing I have ever read. They have more. Therefore, they will consume more. As such, they will pay more. It doesn’t matter what percentage it is of their wealth.

    Jay, you are possibly the stupidest human on the face of the planet. Anyone who would say what you said above is unable to comprehend anything at all. I though of explaining why the statement you decry as “stupid” is actually true, but you’re too stupid to understand it. Of course, you’ve demonstrated that idiocy over and over, but I kept thinking you were amenable to reason. I now realize that you are incapable of understanding anything. I’ve never seen a better example than you of the old saying, “Often wrong, but never uncertain.” You’re also an asshole, as so many stupid but certain people are.

  33. Jay says:

    Mike – Another Internet tough guy.

    Yawn.

  34. Enlightened Liberal says:

    Reasons a move to a consumption tax is a stupid idea

    - No mortgage tax deduction: Watch the housing market implode.
    - Consumer economy is 2/3 of the economy, add a 30% tax and watch it stop. Don’t forget the state taxes aren’t going away. Expect a huge black market.
    -Most Americans would pay more tax under a flat tax (I’m not calling it a fair tax, it’s not).
    -It isn’t equal tax for everyone. The poor and middle class spend more than they make (that’s why they are poor) and will pay a great proportion of their income to a flat tax.
    -Any “savings” from eliminating the IRS will be countered by trying to counter the black market.
    -Tariffs will have to be increased to make up for the lost revenue, as everybody travelling abroad will load up their luggage with foreign goods. Which of course contravenes trade agreements.

    Only two types of people think the flat tax has merit: Multimillionaires and morons.
    Take a guess what category Jay is in.

  35. Jay says:

    Apparently, Enlightened Liberal goes to the same School of Stupid that Frameone attends because he’s just as fucking dumb as his cohort.

    For those that can actually read, I am not an advocate for a flat tax.

    I mean, really. Were you dropped often as a baby or is it just an act?

  36. Gravypan says:

    I’m guessing some of the braniacs here have never heard of the term compromise.

  37. mambochicken23 says:

    For what it’s worth, I think Jay’s skeletal idea for a new tax system (e.g., the progressive consumption tax) is something worth thinking about. It’s certainly more interesting and seemingly fair than a strict flat tax or blanket consumption tax.

    Not that I want to douse the flames of anger that are licking up the sides of this comments section…

  38. Enlightened Liberal says:

    Being called dumb by jay is like being called unethical by Tom Delay. And it seems like Gravypan is cut from the same cloth. You folks get shrill when you’re in the minority.

  39. Enlightened Liberal says:

    By the way, still waiting for you to prove that more people were in poverty after 10 years of the Great Society. Chop chop zippy.

  40. “Oooh. You must get such a rise talking so tough in the comments section of a blog!”

    Do you get a rise acting so ignorant? Or is it not an act? Are you truly this stupid?

  41. “Mike – Another Internet tough guy.

    Yawn.”

    Why are you here? You obviously have nothing to add to this debate, so why post?

  42. archiesteel says:

    Jay, how deep do you plan on digging that hole for yourself, exactly?

    I just hope it’s deep enough that we don’t hear your drivel anymore…

  43. “I’m guessing some of the braniacs here have never heard of the term compromise.”

    Unfortunately, that seems like the s one thing the Democrats are good at, comprising.

    But sometimes you need to stick to your guns cause the other side is wrong.

  44. Ian says:

    “Can you say, ‘hit piece,’ Mr. Bartlett?” According to Bruce Bartlett’s WSJ article:

    BB (hereinafter meaning Bruce Bartlett, with apologies to a true great, BB King): “It was originally devised by the Church of Scientology in the early 1990s as a way to get rid of the Internal Revenue Service”

    Me: This seems like a scientific approach to the review of FairTax; Scientologists are kooks, the FairTax must be a kooky idea.

    BB: “In reality, the FairTax rate is not 23%. Messrs. Linder and Chambliss get this figure by calculating the tax as if it were already incorporated into the price of goods and services. (This is known as the tax-inclusive rate.)”

    Me: Hmmm, I wonder what income tax rates begin to look like, if calculated, “externally” – as a percentage of what’s left of taxpayers’ income? Care to tell us THAT, BB?

    BB: “This is only the beginning of the deceptions in the FairTax.”

    Me: Oh, like their website, FairTax.org, hasn’t already thoroughly debunked most of these “straw men” that have been floated (all, that is, except this newest Scientology angle – and I doubt that they’ll spend much time on that one – preposterous).

    BB: “the federal government would have to pay taxes to itself”

    Me: The idea here is to prevent government from competing with the private sector. But why even mention this, when later you say, “but its tax collection will also be … higher.”

    BB: “The FairTax rate, however, is not high enough to finance the higher spending it imposes.”

    Me: Didn’t do your research: “…The Beacon Hill Institute at Suffolk University and Laurence Kotlikoff, Professor of Economics at Boston University, have teamed up to provide a sound methodology for estimating the FairTax base and computing the FairTax rate. Their paper demonstrates that the 23 percent rate specified by the Fair Tax Act (HR 25) is eminently feasible and suggests what led Gale and the President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform6 to reach the opposite – and incorrect – conclusion. (See Paper )” See also: Tax Panel rebuttal + Wm Gale rebuttal

    BB: (Regarding the blanket 30% increase attributed in multiple places in your article, “tanks,” “newly-constructed homes,” the added amount that would be paid by “state and local governments.”)

    Me: Nowhere do you point out the price efficiencies that would be gained under FairTax. Kotlikoff and associates found that these ranged from 20% – 30%, and averaged them to 22% across the economy. Thus, we’re ALREADY PAYING an embedded 22% in our retail prices. If you believe in market competition (do you?), then you must allow for the elimination of these embedded taxes – which means relative price stability (due to lower costs of doing business – for every business entity contributing at every stage of production). Thus, representing an add-on of 30% is blatant demogoguery.

    BB: “Aside from the incredible complexity and intrusiveness of tracking every American’s monthly income — and creating a de facto national welfare program — the FairTax does not include the cost of this rebate in the tax rate.”

    Me: The only purpose for tracking income, is for social security payouts. That “incredible complexity and intrusiveness of tracing every American’s … income” – last time I checked – is what the current income tax system, and theIRS, are all about. FairTax bases “prebates” on family size. Prebates are sent to ALL American families to untax the necessities, thus eliminating wasteful bureaucracy,and corruption-producing tax code rules and regulations.

    BB: “the FairTax does not include the cost of this rebate in the tax rate.”

    Me: Somebody told ya wrong – like Prego spaghetti sauce, “It’s in deah.” That extra 5% you then introduce is the amount that Kotlikoff DEDUCTS from the 23% to derive the rate sans prebate.

    BB: “Rejecting all the tricks of FairTax supporters…”

    Me: Hey, you calling me a trickster?

    BB: “…professional revenue estimators have always concluded that a national retail sales tax would have to be much, much higher than 23%.”

    Me: Then, why hasn’t William Gale, and the president’s Tax Panel, delivered their economic methodology (substantiating higher quoted tax rates) to Kotlikoff or FairTax.org? Hmmm?

    BB: “Perhaps the biggest deception in the FairTax, however, is its promise to relieve individuals from having to file income tax returns, keep extensive financial records and potentially suffer audits.”

    Me: Huh? What’s to deceive? Individuals do not file income tax returns. Businesses don’t either; businesses will file basically an expanded state sales tax return. Individuals would keep financial records, but not for the purposes of filing a return. And working families would not be subject to audit unless they ran a business.

    BB: “the idea of making April 15 just another day, this seems to be a major selling point for their proposal”

    Me: Duh. Like that’s bad to get out from under the thumb of an intrusive government that has been proven arbitrary in the manner in which it administers the current tax code?

    BB: “In short, the FairTax is too good to be true, and voters should not take seriously any candidate who supports it.”

    Me: Sorry, BB. Your commentary is too bad to be credible. Next time, at least familiarize yourself with the research and rebuttals to the demogoguery that is sure to assail it.

    Readers should expect these assaults on FairTax to increase as this eminently workable – in fact, URGENTLY REQUIRED – tax plan gains adherents.

  45. FairTax on the Web – August 31, 2007

  46. brif says:

    we live in a world where multi-millionaires such as Leona Helmsley leave $12 million to their friggin pets and paris hilton is sitting on several million. how can anyone seriously argue against the inheritance tax?

  47. Jay says:

    You obviously have nothing to add to this debate, so why post?

    Actually, I added quite a bit. I’ll repeat what I wrote. Maybe you can respond or comment:

    I think the entire current tax code needs to be scrapped.

    The way you can make it progressive is by levying the tax on total consumption, rather than individual purchases. People would calculate their total income, subtract their total savings and pay taxes on the difference. The first $20-$25K of consumption would be tax-free (allowing for lower income people to not have to worry about taxes on things like food, clothing and other necessities), and from there the tax rates would be progressive rather than flat. The more you spent and the less you saved, the higher your tax rate would be.

    Now, would you care to comment on that or are you and the others just more content to hurl insults?

  48. brif says:

    incredibly vague jay. what exactly is considered “consumption” and by whom? who will be tracking this “consumption?”

  49. chum says:

    Too bad the threads here too often morph into name calling. Many people would like to see the IRS and it’s requirements (giveaways) disappear.

    Most of the alternative proposals being put out there create as many and likely more divisive problems than what we currently have.

    A system is needed that addresses all 3 levels of taxation (federal, state and local) rolling them into one.

    I know many here don’t like Ron Paul, but it is this issue and his non-interventionalist policies that allow me to overlook his other shortcomings.

    There are no answers in the current political make-up. It’s going to take someone like Paul, with overwhelming public support, to even allow any chance to improve the situation. There will be a lot of maney and entrenched interests working against significant change.

  50. Enlightened Liberal says:

    chum, I don’t know if I agree that change is needed, at least in the way taxes are collected. This whole argument comes down to “I don’t want to do IRS forms”. Of course to people like Steve Forbes, who would save millions annually, it is something else entirely.

  51. Jay says:

    Good question Brif. I saw something on a website that described it like this:

    “One way to think of a consumption-tax system is simply as an income tax that allows unlimited deductions for savings and that taxes all withdrawals from savings, much like independent retirement accounts (IRAs).”

    By no means, is the IRS going to go away with new tax laws in place. The system would however, encourage saving which our current tax system does not. In addition, it is more than just “IRS forms.” People with lower incomes often qualify for credits and refunds they are not aware of and are content to send the 1040-EZ form, and shy away from the 1040 because there’s too much to do. Tax preparation has become a billion dollar industry in this country, and what drives it is the complexity of the tax code.

  52. brif says:

    let me understand what you’re proposing jay. you want to replace our current income tax system with a tax solely on income? yeah you can say you’re really taxing “consumption,” but the basis for your tax system by your own description is still income. that kind of a system is way more regressive than what we have now.

  53. Enlightened Liberal says:

    Personally, I think it is pointless “debating” Jay until he can show that he understands what marginal income is and how it affects tax policy.

  54. Jay says:

    et me understand what you’re proposing jay. you want to replace our current income tax system with a tax solely on income?

    No. It is taxes based on consumption – ie, spending.

    And it is only regressive it the tax is at one level (ie flat). This wouldn’t be, because it is based on how much you spend and also exempts the first $20-$25K of those expenditures.

  55. Quaker in a Basement says:

    A system is needed that addresses all 3 levels of taxation (federal, state and local) rolling them into one.

    Federalism? Bah!

  56. brif says:

    no jay, the system as you describe is too vague to be a “consumption” tax. you still haven’t described what exactly constitutes “consumption.” most recently you mention taxing withdrawals from “savings.” what do you mean by “savings?” are you honestly proposing that the government monitors my bank account for every withdrawal that i make?

  57. Jay says:

    Brif, consumption = spending.

    At the end of the year, you take your total income, subtract what you have saved and pay tax on the difference. By exempting the first $25,000, you help lower and middle income families whose consumption (ie spending) each year is dominated more by necessities such as food, housing, clothing, etc. At that point is where the progressivism kicks in. The more you spend and the less you saved, the higher your tax rate would be.

    The devil of course, is in the details, but that’s an overall view of it.

  58. Enlightened Liberal says:

    Soooooo, when the rich person gets to the cash register the cashier will carefully analyze the amount of purchases over the year and assess the proper tax?

    Or will everyone get ripped off all year and you will file a tax form to get a rebate? Oh Noes! Here comes the IRS!!!

    And in this scheme, capital gains escape any form of taxation. Which will destroy the middle class, because the tax revenue will have to be made up by— guess who! The people who consume all of their income (or more)!

  59. brif says:

    “At the end of the year, you take your total income…”

    then it is a tax based on income, you just said so.

    based on the system you describe, the middle class would get hammered by taxes because by far their biggest expense is housing.

  60. Jay says:

    Brif, the New American Foundation has a lot of information about the consumption tax. Take a look.

  61. Jay says:

    then it is a tax based on income, you just said so.

    No, it is not. You took one portion of what I wrote and left the rest out!

    based on the system you describe, the middle class would get hammered by taxes because by far their biggest expense is housing.

    You’re really not paying attention. I said more than once that the first say, $25,000 of expenditures would be exempt. That would for the most part, cover housing, clothing and food for middle and lower income families.

    Let’s do it with numbers. Joe Blow makes $50,000 last year. Of that $50,000, let’s say he saved $5000. That means he would have spent $45,000. Now, let’s also say that $12,000 of that was for rent. He spent $9000 on food, and another $2000 on clothes. That $23,000 would get deducted from that $45,000, leaving $22,000 worth of expenditures that would be taxed. These aren’t hard figures, but you’re apparently not misunderstanding the process.

  62. brif says:

    “Joe Blow makes $50,000 last year. Of that $50,000, let’s say he saved $5000. That means he would have spent $45,000.”

    uh, jay, if joe blow saved $5000 and spent $45000, he wouldn’t have any money left to pay his taxes.

  63. frameone says:

    Now that we’ve got off to “a good first step in creating a discussion to overhaul our current tax system” by way of the rejecting out right the Fair Tax, I’d suggest this is also an interesting take on the consumption tax:

    The Impossibility of Taxing Only Consumption

    Having challenged the merits of the goal of taxing only consumption and freeing savings from taxation, we now proceed to deny the very possibility of achieving that goal, i.e., we maintain that a consumption tax will devolve, willy-nilly, into a tax on income and therefore on savings as well. In short, that even if, for the sake of argument, we should want to tax only consumption and not income, we should not be able to do so.

    Let us take, first, the Fisher plan, which, seemingly straightforward, would exempt saving and tax only consumption. Let us take Mr. Jones, who earns an annual income of $100,000. His time preferences lead him to spend 90 percent of his income on consumption, and save-and-invest the other 10 percent. On this assumption, he will spend $90,000 a year on consumption, and save-and-invest the other $10,000. Let us assume now that the government levies a 20 percent tax on Jones’s income, and that his time-preference schedule remains the same. The ratio of his consumption to savings will still be 90:10, and so, after-tax income now being $80,000, his consumption spending will be $72,000 and his saving-investment $8,000 per year. [9]

    Suppose now that instead of an income tax, the government follows the Irving Fisher scheme, and levies a 20 percent annual tax on Jones’s consumption. Fisher maintained that such a tax would fall only on consumption, and not on Jones’s savings. But this claim is incorrect, since Jones’s entire savings-investment is based solely on the possibility of his future consumption, which will be taxed equally. Since future consumption will be taxed, we assume, at the same rate as consumption at present, we cannot conclude that savings in the long run receives any tax exemption or special encouragement. There will therefore be no shift by Jones in favor of savings-and-investment due to a consumption tax. [10] In sum, any payment of taxes to the government, whether they be consumption or income, necessarily reduces Jones’s net income. Since his time preference schedule remains the same, Jones will therefore reduce his consumption and his savings proportionately. The consumption tax will be shifted by Jones until it becomes equivalent to a lower rate of tax on his own income. If Jones still spends 90 percent of his net income on consumption, and 10 percent on savings-investment, his net income will be reduced by $15,000, instead of $20,000, and his consumption will now total $76,000, and his savings-investment $9,000. In other words, Jones’s 20 percent consumption tax will become equivalent to a 15 percent tax on his income, and he will arrange his consumption-savings proportions accordingly. [11]

    http://www.mises.org/story/1768

    What’s the response?

    At the same time, I don’t see how a consumption tax in any represents a simplification of the tax system. Seems just as much paperwork and calculations would have to be done to figure out what one owes.

    And how does one grow the economy by encouraging savings and discouraging spending? I understand that higher savings rates mean more money for investment but if people are saving more, that means they’re spending less. How does less spending grow the economy?

  64. Justin says:

    It’s amazing to me to see thousands of bits expressed one way and the other in a argument over something NEITHER SIDE has bothered looking at or understanding.

    Then, when one commenter puts something logically and factually based out there (thanks, Ian) it’s totally ignored?

    The FairTax is fair to everyone, every time.

    Normal sales taxed based consumption taxes are regressive, it’s true. However, typically NRST (national retail sales tax) plans do not include any sort of “de-taxation”, because of the near impossibilty of figuring need based relief on a case by case basis. The result then, is a piecemeal de-taxing of certain items based on which industry can get the most leverage in DC, and who can scream their product is ‘a necessity’ the loudest.

    The FairTax doesn’t try to dictate what is a necessity, it doesn’t care what you spend you money on. It only untaxes every nickel spent up to the national poverty level, with a pre-funded tax rebate (also called the “prebate”).

    Every ’single’ person gets the same tax relief, regardless of income, race, sex, or location. Every married couple gets the same tax relief, every time, every situation. Every single parent with one kid gets the same relief.

    What could possibly be more ‘fair’?

    Taxation based on consumption, which is somewhat dictated by wealth and income… relief based on merely existing.

    http://www.fairtax.org
    http://www.fairtaxgroups.com

  65. Justin says:

    “And how does one grow the economy by encouraging savings and discouraging spending? I understand that higher savings rates mean more money for investment but if people are saving more, that means they’re spending less. How does less spending grow the economy?”

    I suppose that depends on how you define ‘grow the economy’.

    The more you save, the more you invest (or the more your bank has to loan). Your investments and your bank’s loans allow businesses the financial ability to start and grow. Larger businesses hire more people. More businesses compete for employees and raise wages.

    More employees making more money…..that’s economic growth.

    Most people are going to spend that more money eventually, and also economic growth.

  66. Enlightened Liberal says:

    What are you going to do about Social Security and Medicare (16%)?

  67. “Actually, I added quite a bit.”

    Not any more.

    “Now, would you care to comment on that or are you and the others just more content to hurl insults?”

    So you think income tax is too complex, but you like the simplicity of your plan.

  68. Justin says:

    “At the same time, I don’t see how a consumption tax in any represents a simplification of the tax system. Seems just as much paperwork and calculations would have to be done to figure out what one owes.”

    At a personal level:
    Right now you work all year and your employer takes the fedral government’s cut before they even write your check. Then, in April you get to spend a couple hours to a few days and several dollars trying to figure out how much of your money you should tell the federal government they should give you back. or, you ge to spend time and money figuring out how much more you owe them.

    Under the FT, all of that goes away. You submit a form that tells the SSA that you are a ’single’, and you’re done. Everytime you spend a dollar, the store sends 23 cents to the government for you.

    At a business level:
    You run your business all year scared you might accidentally break some rule buried in 70,000 pages of tax law. Everytime you hire an employee you have to pay the federal government 7.65% of his salary out of your pocket just for the pleasure of hiring him. You probably even get to pay a tax accountant and/or a tax lawyer to make sure you don’t screw up somewhere. You also have to pay taxes on the profits your company makes, and you have to be careful not to make too much money, otherwise you’ll face a windfall profits tax.

    Under the FT, all of that goes away. If you sell retail goods or services, you remit 22.75% of your total sales to the taxing authority in your state. You get to keep that .25% for your troubles.

    Both situations sound pretty simple to me.

  69. “The FairTax is fair to everyone, every time.”

    Not even close.

    The less income you have the more you consume as a percentage of that income.

    Also, the more income you have the less it would affect you if you have to pay a certain percentage of that income in taxes.

    Therefore, if you want to raise money without harming the economy, you need a progressive tax plan, like the current income tax system.

    You don’t need to rebuild it, just modify it slightly and make it more simpler.

    For instance, make all forms of income taxable as income. This would include wages, inheritance, investments, etc.

  70. “Both situations sound pretty simple to me.”

    It’s simple alright, poor and middle class people will have to pay a lot more in taxes meaning they won’t spend as much meaning the economy will grind to a halt. Meanwhile, rich people will be able to buy their stuff overseas, therefore avoiding the tax altogether.

  71. Justin says:

    “What are you going to do about Social Security and Medicare (16%)?”

    The programs stay in place, the method of funding changes.

    Your paycheck will no longer reflect a 7.65% deduction for SSA and Medicare, youu employer will no longer have the burden of matching those taxes, and will have an extra 7.65% in his budget to spend on salaries, instead of taxes for the privledge of having employees.

    DO NOT MISUNDERSTAND ME!!
    The programs do not go away. HR25 has nothing to do with SSA or medicare/caid. The Ft merely throws away all the piecemeal methods of taxation (business taxes, income taxes, profit taxes, estate taxes, capital gains taxes, payroll taxes, etc) and replaces them dollar for dollar with a 23% tax on ever dollar spent at the retail level.

  72. Justin says:

    “The less income you have the more you consume as a percentage of that income.”

    Yes, certianly. So this would harm someone who spends 100% of his income, right?

    Wrong

    If a person at the poverty level spent every dime he made in income, he wouldn’t pay a cent in taxes.

    Let’s put some real numbers in this discussion.
    Adam makes $10,000 a year….he’s basically dirt poor and just barely scraping by.

    Under the FT he’ll pay 23% of that $10,000 in federal taxes or $2300 for the year.
    Under the FT, he’ll receive a $196 monthly check that eliminates taxes up to the poverty level…those checks total $2348. He gets $2348 to cover a $2300 tax burden.

    So, not only does Adam get to keep all of his $10,000 paycheck (no payroll or income taxes) he also makes $48 off the rebate.
    (and before you try to suggest he’s too poor to pay income tax, the standard decuction is less than 10K, right? he might get a refund in april, but he’s not getting off the hook for money over the standard deduction, nor is he getting ANY of those payroll taxes back)

    now, how does that “hurt the poor”?

  73. Enlightened Liberal says:

    Some interesting tidbits from the flat tax web site

    “Yes, the FairTax is fair, and in fact, much fairer than the income tax. Wealthy people spend more money than other individuals. They buy expensive cars, big houses, and yachts.

    So basically a 23% sales tax will apply on the sale of homes. At the same time, the mortgage interest deduction is lost. So the day the flat tax is initiated the value of homes will fall about 1/3.

    Need I go on? What flat tax morons miss about these scams is that the tax system is the way it is for some good reasons, and also some bad reasons. Tax incentives are there to encourage things that society sees as good (home ownership, having children) and to discourage things that society sees as bad (sin taxes). Economics 101 says that if something is taxed higher, people will do less of it. By taxing ONLY consumption, people will consume less or work to evade consumption taxes. By taxing all activities at some level, a fully balanced economy is reached. You’ll never convince the true believers, but anyone who has studied this issue objectively has found it to be a scam.

  74. frameone says:

    “More employees making more money….. Most people are going to spend that more money eventually.”

    Which brings us back to the example laid out by Rothbard that i linked to. Savings are deferred consumption so there really is no such thing as tax free savings. At the same time, people will adjust their spending such that the consumption tax becomes a de facto tax on income.

    And again, you are talking people making more because savings create investment which create jobs, but if people are discouraged from spending in the first place what’s driving demand? … you’re argument seems to be missing one side …

  75. Justin says:

    “It’s simple alright, poor and middle class people will have to pay a lot more in taxes.”

    see the above response

    “… meaning they won’t spend as much meaning the economy will grind to a halt.”

    the poor and middle classes have more of their income to spend (no payroll taxes no income tax withholding)….and since they tend to spend all of their income, I don’t see the economy slowing down. Hell, most people credit the $300 rebate check everyone got a few years back as a benefit to the economy….imagine a coupe with one child getting an extra $450 bucks every month to help cover the 23% of every dollar they spend on federal taxes….

    “Meanwhile, rich people will be able to buy their stuff overseas, therefore avoiding the tax altogether.”

    Can you buy new houses overseas? How about new cars? If you can, how do you get them registered here? I don’t see a millionaire trotting over to Korea to pickup toilet paper and toothpaste.

    Besides…what would be the point? Nothing is going to cost more, in fact many things will cost less. Since businesses are having to pay profit and payroll taxes thay can compete in the market for your dollar from a lower starting point. Wal-Mart et al. have proven that the market will beat a path to the lowest price possible. 22% of the current retail price of nearly every item (on average) is the burden of the current system. Take the current system out of the retail price, add the FT in…and the after FT price is effectively unchanged.

    Meanwhile, overseas tax structures are still in place. If it’s cheeper after the FT over there…..it’s probably cheeper right now. What keeps richs people from buying everything overseas as it is?

  76. Justin says:

    “And again, you are talking people making more because savings create investment which create jobs, but if people are discouraged from spending in the first place what’s driving demand?”

    The same thing that drives demand now….greed.

    The need to have the newest, fastest, bestest. (or at least, newer, faster, and better than the jerk next door)

    Why does anyone buy a brand new Lexus when a 15 yr old corolla does the same job? Why does the PS3 sell so fast, when it’s not anymore or less of a distraction as the PS2 and the PSone sitting next it?

    If you have more money in your pocket and prices don’t change, what would stop or slow your consumption rate?

    I would agree with you if the FT caused a 30% increse in cost, as Bartlett suggests. However, that’s not the case. See the above comment to see why.

  77. Justin says:

    “So basically a 23% sales tax will apply on the sale of homes. At the same time, the mortgage interest deduction is lost. So the day the flat tax is initiated the value of homes will fall about 1/3.”

    Thanks for the softball

    Why does it matter that you lose the mortgage dedcution?

    What are you deducting it from? Your income tax burden.

    Under the FT, you no longer have a income tax burder….why would you complain that you can’t deduct something from it?

    I have a coupon for a $1 off a bottle of soda, and I walk into a quik-stop that is selling those sodas for 89 cents….am I going to suggest that I want the eleven cents back?

    If you want to keep the deduction, you have to keep the system that gives you the deduction….

    or you can lose the system, and lose the dedcution…

    The current system costs me more than the benefit the deduction gives me.

  78. Enlightened Liberal says:

    Nice dodge. Now answer the question. How would home values sustain themselves with a 23% income tax and no income tax deduction? Don’t answer with glib paeans to the “free market” and “liberating taxpayers”.

  79. frameone says:

    “If you have more money in your pocket and prices don’t change, what would stop or slow your consumption rate?”

    um, because consumption is being taxed. The more you spend, the higher your taxes …

  80. Justin says:

    And BTW, one thing I’ve seen here more than anywhere else…

    The Flat Tax and the FairTax are TWO DIFFERENT THINGS.

    Most Flat Tax proposals are income based flat rates, either pulled at the time of pay, or due at the end of the year.

    Flat taxes are rediculously regressive.

    Again, math illustates this.

    Remember Adam from above? $10,000/year at a 17% flat tax rate (a number often cited as feasible) is a tax burden of $1700. Adam has $8300 left to spend.

    Bob makes $30,000/year. 17% is $5100. Bob has $24,900 left to spend.

    Charlie makes $100,000/year. 17% is $17,000. He has $83,000 left to spend.

    That’s flat taxes for you. it’ll bet those 1700 dollars are a hell of a lot more important to Adam than the 17000 are to Charlie. After all, Charlie still has $83,000 to blow….

    The FairTax does not care how much you make, only how much you spend. and you don’t start getting taxed until you spend MORE than the national poverty level.

  81. Justin says:

    “um, because consumption is being taxed. The more you spend, the higher your taxes … ”

    Please read my post again. The fact that an item is taxed does not prevent it from being bought. The final price of the item (inclusive of taxes) prevents it from being bought.

    Merely taxing an item will not stop people buying from it, unless that tax causes the item to be ‘too expensive’ and not worth the final cost.

    Luxury taxes on cars are geared to stop that…guess what? Those taxes get incorporated into the price of the car, and people still buy them.

    If you go buy a $100 blender today, 22 of those dollars are paying the taxes for every company up the line that helped get that blender together and into you hands.

    After the FT, that $22 goes away from the cost of the item.

    Market forces prove that $22 will fall out of the retail price.

    So you have an untaxed $78 blender sitting on the shelf. Add a 30% exclusive tax to the $78 blender, and it’s new tax inclusive price is $101.40.

    Is a 1.4% increase in the retail price of that blender going to cause a shutdown in the food processing market?

    I doubt it.

  82. Justin says:

    “Nice dodge. Now answer the question. How would home values sustain themselves with a 23% income tax and no income tax deduction? Don’t answer with glib paeans to the “free market” and “liberating taxpayers”.”

    I dunno where your ‘23% income tax’ comes from, I’ll assume you meant 23% consumption tax, and refer you to the above post about prices remaining virtually the same before and after the FT goes into effect.

    I don’t see more than a tacit link between the value of a house and a tax deduction of interest charged on the mortgage to buy that house from owed income taxes.

    While I can agree a more expensive house will generate a larger mortage, and that will generate a larger dollar amount of interest….that’s a long reach…

    I highly doubt people change their perception of a house’s value based on how the interest on the mortgage compares to thier income tax burden.

    My house value is not based on my income, it’s based on square footage and location.

    If the IC system disappears tomorrow, my house is still just as big as it was, and it hasn’t moved.

    Chances are, I’ll be able to sell it at the same price tomorrow as I can today. And I’ll bet you the buyer isn’t going to try to figure out what he’s going to pay in interest next year and add that to his other deductions to hopefully outpace the standard deduction.

    Since it’s a used house….there’s no FT applied to the sale. Meanwhile, new houses (which are subject to the FT) will stay about the same price (labor rates don’t change, material goods are cheeper and the FT is added in)…and if new houses stay the same, you can bet used houses will not move much either.

    If the FT were to cause the price of new houses to increase…well, that makes my house increase as well, doesn’t it? (I know you didn’t want a ‘market forces’ answer, but i really can’t compare house prices without referencing the houseing market)

  83. Justin says:

    “Economics 101 says that if something is taxed higher, people will do less of it.”

    No sir. Econ 101 says as price increases, demand decreases.

    The FT does not increase prices in any significant amount, therefore Econ 101 says demand will not decrease by any significant amount.

    Excise Taxes (what you are referring to) are just an attempt at financial-based social engineering. But the liquer and tobacco market seems to suggest that even punishing taxes will not stop consumption.

  84. Enlightened Liberal says:

    Joe Successful is a VP of a major company and makes $500,000/year. He is married and has two white Christian children. His mortgage/taxes are about $8,000/month, leaving him with $400,000 to spend. His federal income liability is about $100k a year, and his payroll taxes run about $25k (14% of the first 100k SS and 2% Medicare).

    Under the flat tax, he would pay about $110k, including his poverty deduction. But wait! The flat tax is already built in to the home price so he isn’t paying on 100k of income. Also, Joe is successful and successful people don’t spend all of what they earn. Joe lives a lavish lifestyle and only spends about $200k. So his tax is only about $41k.

    Under the flat tax, everyone’s taxes seem to go down! Businesses pay no tax at all , capital gains and inheritance taxes are gone! Yea! And free ponies for everyone!

    But wait! I thought flat tax was revenue neutral? If everyone’s taxes have gone down, how is it revenue neutral?

  85. Enlightened Liberal says:

    “Chances are, I’ll be able to sell it at the same price tomorrow as I can today. And I’ll bet you the buyer isn’t going to try to figure out what he’s going to pay in interest next year and add that to his other deductions to hopefully outpace the standard deduction.”

    Then you’re a moron. Because a $500k house with a 23% tax and no deduction costs me more than a $500k house with no tax and a deduction. Not only that the bank will tell me I can’t afford a $500k house with a 23% tax and no deduction. So guess what, I’ll only pay $350k for that house now because that is all I can afford. So will everyone else, so house prices will go down.

    So you’ve basically just stolen $150k in equity from the home seller but wait! Since the bank holds the note you have really stolen the money from the bank. Anyone want to guess how the bank is going to recoup the money lost by your scheme?

    Right, they are going to foreclose on houses. The glut of available houses will reduce the value even further, robbing everyone else of their home equity (which is the majority of most people’s net worth).

    Your glib schemes don’t work in the real world, that’s why the flat tax is only pushed by kooks and ignoramuses.

  86. Enlightened Liberal says:

    “But the liquer and tobacco market seems to suggest that even punishing taxes will not stop consumption.”

    Strawman alert. No one said it would stop consumption, but it can’t be disputed that areas with higher sin taxes have seen reductions in smoking.

  87. Justin says:

    “Under the flat tax, everyone’s taxes seem to go down! Businesses pay no tax at all , capital gains and inheritance taxes are gone! Yea! And free ponies for everyone!

    But wait! I thought flat tax was revenue neutral? If everyone’s taxes have gone down, how is it revenue neutral?”

    I dunno how it would work under the Flat Tax…I’m not in support of the Flat tax because I don’t feel it work.

    However, if you meant FairTax instead, I’ll take a wag at answering your question.

    The FairTax IS revenue neutral (as proven by three different studies including the President’s Council on Tax Reform…when then went on to change the provisions of the FT into some other NRST and called it a bad idea)

    The FairTax raises exactly as much revenue for the federal government as the current income tax system does. (still not enough to cover the federal budget, either way, but hey, let’s fix the burst pipe before we start bailing the house out)

    The FairTax is RN because it takes a smaller piece of more dollars.

    Right now, only income is taxed. Under the FT, consumption is taxed. Consumption ALWAYS outpaces income.

    So, no, not everyone has lower taxes.

    Many people don’t pay into the income tax system. People paid cash under the table, tourists, undocumented workers, people who don’t have incomes but still spend accumulated wealth (trust fund babies, for example).

    Let’s use a trite but obvious example; Paris Hilton. in 2006 Ms Hilton had three taxable income sources. The Simple Life show, The Carl’s Junior commerical, and that video (I gonna take the high road and assume Ms Hilton paid taxes on her piece of that, um….pie) (Crap…was ‘House of Wax’ made in 2006? If it was, she probably doesn’t deserve anything from her role in it anyway, amirite?)

    While I’m sure she was paid handsomely for those three or four jobs, I’m sure she spent WAY MORE than she made. How? she spent wealth, money she had/earned/got before jan 1 2006.

    She only paid income tax on her income..and her family probably has some good tax shelters in place to make that rate as low as possible. What would she had paid in taxes if 23% of every dollar she spent went towards her tax burden? (and frankly, i doubt that $2348 prebate check means nearly as much to her as it might someone who was flipping burgers at Carl’s Jr all year.)

    Adding further insult to injury at Ms. Hilton’s expense…I’m also going to make the bold assumption that she doesn’t shop at garage sales, and she probably doesn’t buy used cars to plow drunkenly into things. Adam, our $10,000 year burger flipper is probably not buying brand new cell phones (with matching shoes) and cars. He’s probably living on hand-me-downs and garage sales, hsi only “new” purchases are food (probably less than ms hilton spends) and utilities (again, probably less than ms hilton).

    Right now we tax 35%-45% of income dollars.

    After the FT we tax 23% of over-poverty level dollars.

    Ponies will not be free, either way…but you could spend your prebate on one if you like.

  88. Justin says:

    “glib schemes don’t work in the real world, that’s why the flat tax is only pushed by kooks and ignoramuses.”

    The Flat Tax…yes.
    But I’m not pushing the Flat Tax.

    (perhaps you should work on your enlightened-ment)

    “…a $500k house with a 23% tax and no deduction costs me more than a $500k house with no tax and a deduction.”

    This is obviously a new house you are talking about, right? Because the FT only applies to new houses.

    And no..under the FT a $500K house costs….$500K. You’ll get a $500K loan and you make payments against your $500K principal.

    The FT is NOT ADDED to the price of the house, it IS part of the price of the house.

    “Not only that the bank will tell me I can’t afford a $500k house with a 23% tax and no deduction.”

    I don’t see why not. The 23% tax is part of the $500K price. you can’t buy the $500K house without the builder paying $115K to the government in FT, and you can bet the builder isn’t going to eat $115K or risk the government wanting that money (plus interest) later.

    “So guess what, I’ll only pay $350k for that house now because that is all I can afford. So will everyone else, so house prices will go down.”

    If you don’t understand the situation as I have laid it out above…you will never understand it. The FT is not ON TOP of the current price of the house. The price of the house (and it’s future value) has the FT incorporated into it. You can’t buy a new house w/o the FT component, therefore EVERY house value in the market has the FT built into it.

    “So you’ve basically just stolen $150k in equity from the home seller”

    Nope, If we are talking FT we are talking new houses…no equity in a new house, unless the buyer brings it from thier old house. A home builder is in it for the profits, not the equity (Their equity is the moeny they spent building the home)

    “but wait! Since the bank holds the note you have really stolen the money from the bank. Anyone want to guess how the bank is going to recoup the money lost by your scheme?

    Right, they are going to foreclose on houses. The glut of available houses will reduce the value even further, robbing everyone else of their home equity (which is the majority of most people’s net worth).”

    The home’s values don’t change. Your available credit doesn’t change. You have more money to spend on your mortgage (which lessens the chance of forclosure). You get to sell your used home tax free, and if you buy a new home your tax burden is built into the price of the house.

    Your logic is flawed because you are trying to add the FT on top of the value of an item.
    In reality, since every retail item has the FT built into its value, the perceived value of something does not change.

  89. Enlightened Liberal says:

    The flat tax=fair tax. It was rebranded when people were on to the scam. As far as the rest, all I’ll say is there is nothing like a true believer.

  90. Justin says:

    “Strawman alert. No one said it would stop consumption, but it can’t be disputed that areas with higher sin taxes have seen reductions in smoking.”

    Gasoline taxes do not affect gasoline consumption.
    Road diesel taxes do not affect miles driven by this nation’s truckers.
    High tax stamps on cigarettes don’t stop smoking, it just pushes the buyers to tax havens and MSRP prices fall to keep the market.

    Not a straw man at all. How did the high tax rates that followed prohibition affect alcohol consumption?

    But i digress, the FT is not an excise tax.

    The FT is an inclusive tax built into the price of a new retail good or service designed to replace the embedded taxes already present in all goods and services.

    Excise taxes are exclusive taxes tacked on top of the value of a good or service designed to alter the demand by artifically altering the price.

  91. Justin says:

    “The flat tax=fair tax. It was rebranded when people were on to the scam.”

    really? by who and when?

    The FairTax was developed in 1995 by the AFFT, a group of houston businessmen who knew there had to be something better than the current system

    Pick a Flat tax proposal and tell me how it’s equal to the FT. I can’t find one “flat tax” proposal that is based on consumption or is levied by a sales tax.

    “As far as the rest, all I’ll say is there is nothing like a true believer.”

    What, you can’t offer anything that suggests i’m wrong so you just give up?

    You ask ill-informed questions. I answer them accurately and politely.
    You make non-factual statements, and I politely expose your fallacies with logic and fact.

    …and all you can do in response is continue being ignorant (FairTax/Flat Tax) and start calling me names?

    i’m the ‘true believer’ while you cannot understand that th Flat Tax and the FairTax are similar only in the idea that there is only one rate (despite the fact that those rates are very differnt and futhermore are imposed on two very different portions of the economy)?

    I’m beginning to wonder if your handle is somewhat contradictory.

  92. Justin says:

    “Therefore, if you want to raise money without harming the economy, you need a progressive tax plan, like the current income tax system.

    You don’t need to rebuild it, just modify it slightly and make it more simpler.”

    We did that with the Tax Reform act of 1986. 15 tax brackets ranging from 11% to 50% got ’simplifed’ to 2 tax brackets, 15% and 28%. very few deductions, only a couple of social engineering programs, everyone over the age of five listed by SSN, it was very simple.

    20 years later…and we need to do it again?

    suppose we do, will it take another 20 years to need simplification again?

  93. frameone says:

    FYI: Justin is a Bot.

  94. Justin says:

    “FYI: Justin is a Bot.”

    Nope, just a guy with a couple paid hours to kill who enjoys logically and factually destroying people who are ignorant about the topics they discuss.

    Now, if you had said I was a “major league asshole”. Then I would agree.

    In either case, it appears this topic has run out of uninformed people who wish to express their lack of knowledge.

    If not, swing on over to http://www.fairtaxgroups.com and argue with me there.

  95. Enlightened Liberal says:

    “Nope, just a guy with a couple paid hours to kill who enjoys logically and factually destroying people who are ignorant about the topics they discuss.”

    Let me fix that for you.

    “Nope, just a guy with a couple of hours paid for by flattax.org who uses discredited arguments and plain lies to debate with people who are smarter than I am.”

    There. You’re welcome.

  96. “Nope, just a guy with a couple paid hours to kill who enjoys logically and factually destroying people who are ignorant about the topics they discuss.”

    Well, I’ll tell you one thing, you have more stamina than I do. I left this thread when you started flooding it with nonsense.

    I would have responded to your particularly ignorant posts and called you a crackpot, but I had a deadline to meet.

  97. midderpidge says:

    Justin are we tying that to a 50% capital gains tax?

  98. Justin says:

    Funny, ‘enlightened’…I don’t work for FairTax.org, nor do I know anyone from that organization.

    I’m a poster on fairtaxgroups.com, and I’m a parts warehouse manager for an auto dealer in Oklahoma. We had a slow friday due to the holiday.

    I’m also a life long democrat.

    “driscredited arguments and plain lies”? name one.

    You are the person that continually referred to the FairTax as the Flat Tax, conisdering them the same, despite the obvious differences between them.

    Just because you made yourself look like an ignorant fool, you shouldn’t go around blaming me for it.

    C.S. if you’d like to take a wag at me or my position, feel free to try, either here or at fairtaxgroups.com.

  99. Justin says:

    “Justin are we tying that to a 50% capital gains tax?”

    No. The FairTax removes the Capital Gains tax.

    However…when you spend your gain on new goods and services, you’ll pay the same FT rate as you would for every other purchase.

    This is designed to encourage investment, which strengthens the commericial side of the economy. And, as I posted above, stronger commerical results in more jobs and higher wages.

    This also allows the FT to tax rich people while not taxing poor people. Just like poor people don’t have capital gains to worry about taxing under the current system, they’ll won’t be hurt by the removal of those taxes. Rich people who paid CGtax in the current system will be taxed when they spend those gains.

    Thanks for the question.

  100. “This also allows the FT to tax rich people while not taxing poor people. Just like poor people don’t have capital gains to worry about taxing under the current system, they’ll won’t be hurt by the removal of those taxes.”

    Wow. You’re stupid.

    ‘Poor people don’t pay capital gains, so they won’t be hurt when that a tax on something they don’t have is removed.’

    In reality, the rich will pay less in taxes meaning the poor will have to pay more to compensate.

  101. Justin says:

    I’m sorry, C.S., the US economy is not a zero sum game. Although, when looking at it from a revenue neutral standpoint, it kinda is.

    however, the removal of a tax on the rich during the course of a complete tax overhaul, does not imply that the poor will be newly burdened.

    The removal of capital gains taxes from people who earn capital gains has no impact on people who do not earn capital gains.

    Likewise, the passing of a cigarette tax does not impact people who do not smoke.

    I assume we can agree that the richer you are, the more likely you are to have capital gains, right? conversely, the poorer you are, the less likely you are to have capital gains, correct?

    If a rich person doesn’t pay a tax, why do you assume a poor person will have to pick it up?
    When a rich person doesn’t buy the tags for his car, do poor people get charged extra on their tags?

    I hope we can also agree that rich people spend more money than poor people. The prebate proves that the FT rate is linearlly progressive. the more you spend, the higher your rate.

    How do you think rich people are going to spend those untaxed capital gains?
    they pretty much only have two options.

    1) spend it.
    2) re-invest it.

    They could save it, I suppose, but eventually, they’ll spend it.

    if they spend it, they are taxed on it. since they are rich it’s likely they are spending above the poverty level, so they’ll pay 23% of each dollar instantly, or between

  102. Justin says:

    upon rereading my post, I should have said >0-23% for the effective tax rate on people who are spending dollars above the poverty level.

  103. “however, the removal of a tax on the rich during the course of a complete tax overhaul, does not imply that the poor will be newly burdened.”

    Yes it does, you fucking retard. You have $9 trillion in debt, you need a huge amount of money just on basic upkeep for your nation. Cutting taxes for some people means you are shifting the burden onto others.

    “If a rich person doesn’t pay a tax, why do you assume a poor person will have to pick it up?”

    Because someone has to.

    “When a rich person doesn’t buy the tags for his car, do poor people get charged extra on their tags?”

    What a stupid analogy.

    “How do you think rich people are going to spend those untaxed capital gains?
    they pretty much only have two options.

    1) spend it.
    2) re-invest it.”

    Or

    3.) Spend it somewhere where they don’t have to pay taxes, like outside the United States.

    “They could save it, I suppose, but eventually, they’ll spend it.”

    No. Not true. If it was, you wouldn’t have people dying with million dollar portfolios.

    “if they invest it, that’s more money in the commerical economy, which helps growth (as explained ad nasuem above).

    I can see how this might impact poor people….you know with the increase in wages and employement opportunities and all…..”

    The whole trickle down economy is bullshit. The less money you have, the less opportunities you have. Increasing the amount of investments only helps those who are already rich enough to invest.

    “under the FT every dollar below the poverty level is spent tax free.”

    What about the middle class, since you seem to be fixated on the word poor? Too poor to benefit from the abolishing of the capital gains tax, too rich to benefit from the poverty level rebate.

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  105. BOBOLAMA says:

    I know litte of the the fair tax bill.
    However i would like to to know if anyone who has INC.
    in back of their business,or name will have to pay any fair tax under this bill.
    I was told that no business,or anyone that is in business for themselves will pay the 23-30% tax.
    So does that mean if you want to buy goods and services under the fair tax act, just file INC. and you pay no tax at all. Only your consummers will pay taxes no you. Is this right?

  106. BOBOLAMA says:

    I know litte of the the fair tax bill.
    However i would like to to know if anyone who has INC.
    in back of their business,or name will have to pay any fair tax under this bill.
    I was told that no business,or anyone that is in business for themselves will pay the 23-30% tax.
    So does that mean if you want to buy goods and services under the fair tax act, just file INC. and you pay no tax at all. Only your consummers will pay taxes no you. Is this right?