Posted on 10/19/2006 5:11:50 PM PDT by pigdog
As specified in Congressional bill H.R. 25/S. 25, the FairTax is a proposal to replace the federal personal income tax, corporate income tax, payroll (FICA) tax, capital gains, alternative minimum, self-employment, and estate and gifts taxes with a single-rate federal retail sales tax. The FairTax also provides a prebate to each household based on its demographic composition. The prebate is set to ensure that households pay no taxes net on spending up to the poverty level.
Bill Gale (2005) and the Presidents Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform (2005) suggest that the effective (tax inclusive) tax rate needed to implement H.R. 25 is far higher than the proposed 23% rate. This study, which builds on Gales (2005) analysis, shows that a 23% rate is eminently feasible and suggests why Gale and the Tax Panel reached the opposite conclusion.
This paper begins by projecting the FairTaxs 2007 tax base net of its rebate. Next it calculates the tax rate needed to maintain the real levels of federal and state spending under the FairTax. It then determines if an effective rate of 23% would be sufficient to fund 2007 estimated spending or if not, the amount by which non-Social Security federal expenditures would need to be reduced. Finally, it shows that the FairTax imposes no additional real fiscal burdens on state and local government, notwithstanding the requirement that such governments pay the FairTax when they purchase goods and services.
(Excerpt) Read more at people.bu.edu ...
If taxing government is a good idea for raising revenue, why not just tax government?
Great letter to Columbia U., BTW. Hope you got a response (but doubt it). You deserved one.
The FairTax is a true tax on retail consumption. You might read the first couple of pages of the paper - or the bill itself.
Is any of that supposed to make sense to anyone but you?LET ME ACCUMULATE WEALTH. PLEASE!!!
Let you? Who's stopping you? If you're a loser and don't know how to accumulate wealth without an act of Congress that's your fault. The opportunities for wealth are endless. If you're waiting for Congress to act, you lose.
BTTT
I think after cost savings from all of the "unfair taxes" an 8-12% rate would suffice.
Horse hockey - there's still going to have to be some sort of gov't bureaucracy to collect the funds.
Oh, yeah, the reduction in force or total elimination of the IRS would furthur reduce revenue necessities. I am sure there are related agencies that could be cut as well. A thin government is a healthy government.
So how so you think the average, math averse taxpayer will reconcile his daily FairTax tithing at the grocery store against the lump sum payment they receive monthly to offset his spending on "necessities," (his "prebate")??
My guess is probably the same he rationalize his 1040 each year: "I didn't pay any tax, I got a refund!."
A conversation overheard after the implementation of the FairTax:
FairTax supporter: "Naw ... it just the opposite, your Income tax rate was probably 21% and your Payroll tax rate was another 15% ... that's 36% right there! Don't worry, gub'mint just got cheaper under the FairTax, yessirree!"
If you want to make taxpayers painfully aware of their tax burden, simply eliminate withholding and force Joe Taxpayer to write a monthly check ... rather than receive one.
What does any of that have to do with me, exactly?
It has everything to do with you unless you're one of those trust fund babies living off of your muni's.
Who's stopping you?
The 25% of my income that is confiscated from me before I can: A. invest it, B. spend it, or C. give it away. That's who.
Once again, I ask you, how would you tax the citizenry? On their income or their consumption. What do you want to encourage? Savings or investment.
Or are you one of those people who think that gov't spending is an "investment"?
"I'm having a hard time believing this."
Then by all means you should spend some time teaching yourself about the FairTax. Even reading the first few pages of the lead-in paper would help. Reading some of the bill itself would be even better.
As it is you're merely guessing and assuming things that aren't true. Another source of information is the FairTax website. Become an informed voter.
You might even use the anonymous FairTax rate calculator and find out what your actual effective FairTax rate would be. If you pay taxes now chances are you'll see a sizable drop in your effective tax rate over that you have under the income tax. Frequently the rate is something like 1/2 the effective tax rate under the income tax. But do yourself a favor and read the clear instructions, do it as accurately as you can and see the benefits for yourself.
Haven't we tried that enough? The issue is the method. Do we tax labor or do we tax the fruits of that labor? Meaning, after I have accumulated wealth I'll pay the taxes. Let me accumulate it first.
Anything, well almost anything, that replaces a tax code that punishes achievement, demands reports on almost every aspect of ones life, is so complicated that the IRS refuses to stand behind its own answers to tax payer questions, that rewards some activities and punishes others, that pretends to tax the rich while creating vehicles by which the rich escape the taxes but the middle class can't, that is 60,000+ pages long, and on and on, is well worth serious consideration.
Why? 50 clerks instead of 130,000 agents who hide behind masks to testify before congress.
You don't think states will magically mail 50 checks to the federal government simultaneously, do you.
Completely delusional. The fairtax will take a significant effort to enforce, especially trying to collect from the millions of self-employed.
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