Free Republic
Browse · Search
Smoky Backroom
Topics · Post Article

To: pigdog
1. It allows workers to keep 100% of their pay, with nothing withheld the IRS or for Social Security and Medicare payments.

6. It is expected to remove an average of 22% of the cost of American made goods by removing the built-in payroll tax (the other 7.65% of earnings that employers pay), corporate income tax, and other business taxes that are now passed to consumers as an “embedded" tax of approximately 22% due to the cascading of income and payroll taxes paid by U.S. employers, at every step of production, to the U.S. Treasury. Competition will cause prices to fall by approximately that amount, on average.

Of course these items are mutually exclusive, but fairy taxers like to claim both of them despite the researchers denial that they both can happen. It is just a minor $1.33 Trillion lie. That's more than 10 times the damage Katrina called, just to put it in perspective. A minor fib.

25 posted on 09/02/2005 11:48:19 AM PDT by Always Right
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies ]


To: Always Right; lewislynn; Your Nightmare; RobFromGa
Of course these items are mutually exclusive, but fairy taxers like to claim both of them despite the researchers denial that they both can happen. It is just a minor $1.33 Trillion lie. That's more than 10 times the damage Katrina called, just to put it in perspective. A minor fib.

Yep. The shills will never shut up until their paychecks dry up.

29 posted on 09/02/2005 11:59:35 AM PDT by balrog666 (A myth by any other name is still inane.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies ]

To: Always Right

Of course these items are mutually exclusive,

Actually they aren't as the current taxsystem imposes very heavy burdens on business and the economy that would provide substantial room for a net incease in purchasing power for the consumer as the burdens are removed from producers upstream from retail sales.

http://www.heritage.org/Research/Taxes/hl565.cfm

An American Economic Review study found that every dollar of taxes could impose as much as $4 of lost output on the economy, with the probable harm ranging between $1.32 and $1.47
Edgar K. Browning, "On the Marginal Welfare Cost of Taxation," American Economic Review, Vol. 77, No. 1 (March 1987), pp. 11-23.

"Another study in the Journal of Political Economy estimated that the corporate income tax costs more in lost output than it raises for the government."
Jane G. Gravelle and Laurence J. Kotlikoff, "The Incidence and Efficiency Costs of Corporate Taxation When Corporate and Noncorporate Firms Produce the Same Good," Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 97, No. 4 (1989), pp. 749-780.

 

STATEMENT OF REPRESENTATIVE DICK ARMEY
HEARING ON THE IMPACT ON
INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES OF REPLACING THE FEDERAL INCOME TAX
Committee on Ways and Means, Full Committee, 4-15-97 Testimony

Hinders Economic Opportunity

According to a study by Jane Gravelle, an economist with the Congressional Research Service, and Larry Kotlikoff, an economist at Boston University, the corporate income tax costs the economy more in lost production than it raises in revenue for the Treasury. Dale Jorgenson, the chairman of the Economics Department at Harvard University, found that each extra dollar the government raises in revenue through the current system costs the economy $1.39.

 

Economic Burden of Taxation
William A. Niskanen
Presented October 2003
Friedman Conference
Federal Reserve Bank Dallas page 6.
www.dallasfed.org/news/research/2003/03ftc_niskanen.pdf

"Given that the elasticity c implicit in recent U.S. fiscal conditions is about 0.8 and the average tax rate is about 0.3, the marginal cost of government spending and taxes in the United States may be about $2.75 per additional dollar of tax revenue. One wonders whether there are any government programs for which the marginal value is that high. Given the estimate of the long-term elasticity c from the U.S. time-series data, the marginal cost of government spending and taxes may be as high as $4.50 at the current average tax rate. "


38 posted on 09/02/2005 12:27:26 PM PDT by ancient_geezer (Don't reform it, Replace it!!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies ]

To: Always Right

Nope Rongie, "... the researchers denial that they both can happen ..." is the fiction that the Squirrels are trying to promote. I know of no researchers who have made anything resembling a definitive statement like that - just youse guys (and I doubt you'd qualify as "researchers").


95 posted on 09/02/2005 4:46:54 PM PDT by pigdog
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 25 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Smoky Backroom
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson