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Posted on 09/07/2005 5:15:28 PM PDT by Man50D
Stop it with the $7.50 nonsense. Its bogus. Read #26, and visit Fairtax.org and read the faq.
The point the article was making is not that the boss has claims to the $20K, it is the boss would have to keep the $20K to reduce prices like the fair taxers claim. The article points out the deception the fair taxers use in promoting their tax plan.
Read post 42, LOL....
Have you read Boortz's book or the Fair Tax Bill? (HR.25)
Exactly. Fair taxers have not been able to comprehend this point, no matter how simply it is put to them. It is deny, deny, deny, twist, spin, flip. Out of the dozen plus fair tax pushers on this forum, only one of them has acknowledged this truth.
VATs scare the hell out of me, I think when this book was written and some of the folks involved with the fairtax group, probably considered that folks here don't want a VAT, so they went out of their way to make sure this would not be one (or even look remotely like one).
A flat income tax only taxes American income earners. The Fair Tax also taxes any foreign tourists. A flat tax keeps the IRS around. The Fair Tax abolishes the IRS. The Underground Economy evades the flat income tax. The Fair Tax captures the Underground Economy. The flat income tax still forcibly takes money before it reaches the income earner. The Fair Tax gives all income earners 100% of their earned income. The government gets its cut when you voluntarily go shopping.
Again, this is bogus. The boss does not need to get his price reduction out of the hide of the employee. He gets it out of cheaper materials, physical plant, energy, transportaion, etc.
As I pointed out, the Employer's share of fica is the only part of the payroll process that would NOT be passed on to the employee. That part (its fairly small) will go toward reduction in costs.
Add to that employers share of fica, all the other taxes corporations pay and you have (supprise!) 23% of the cost of a finished product, whether its a sewing needle or a new car.
The writer thinks hes found a flaw, but it is mostly just a flaw in his reasoning.
Go look at the list of economics professors that support Fair Tax. The least among them has better credentials than this smug writer.
The first step to pushing a fairtax, is to overcome the fact, that yes, it is very controversial, and its an idea that is very easy to be slandered and miseducated on.
One senator (Jim Demint, I think), early on in his campaign pushed it, and started dropping in the polls, he switched tracks, and started gaining.
Educate folks on the fairtax, and move incrementaly, at one time social security was the 3rd rail, now its safe to push it as more and more people learn about it.
It can't happen overnite but it can happen, but to deny its controversial is simply innaccurate, but then again, at one time Goldwaters ideas were very controversial......and we wound up with President Reagan....eventually.
That's the gag! Everyone's paying it already. Corporate income taxes are embedded in the cost of every product that everyone buys.
Read the article and weep. The article confirms what RobFromGA found out. Dr, Jorgenson, YOUR SOURCE, says it.
Do you realize the source for the 22% embedded taxes was the study done by Dr. Jorgenson, the very same Dr. Jorgenson the author of this article confirmed the flaw with. Fair Taxers are COMPLETELY discredited.
A lot of wealthy people.
Not many cars last longer than 7-10 years. Most people just don't maintain them that well. In addition, car manufacturers are pretty good at creating slick new body styles that some people "just gotta have"! So they buy it. I don't think that 25 years after the Fair Tax would be enacted that every American would be driving 26 year old cars. Do you?
Slick marketing, deception. Kind of like the idea that you get to keep your whole paycheck and prices come down. This article blows that myth out of the water.
THIS portion, and ONLY this portion, of tax that is taken from the employers pocketbook. The rest is all taken from YOU (the employee).
Add to that employers share of fica, all the other taxes corporations pay and you have (supprise!) 23% of the cost of a finished productSurprise! is right. "All the other taxes corporations pay" you can't seem to list but know the exact percentage of ?...LOL! Sorry, it ain't gonna happen without the employee's losing their withholding.
BTW, nothing I've seen of those 75 economists says anything about price reductions or paycheck percentages....
Saying there'd be no withholding is a no brainer like saying there'd be no income tax returns. DUH!...No withholding from what is the question?
OK, I spent spent some time reading the FAQ's and all I saw was kneejerk nonsense.
Yep,
There's no such thing as a "fair tax".
LOL, so call it what it is a "retail sales tax", levied on the use or consumption of taxable property.
You know, implemented the same as state retail sales taxes taxing import goods with the same burdens as are imposed on domestic manufacturing today, instead of providing a protected environment from full taxation under the income/payroll tax system.
The name by the way was suggested by a person participating in a focus group covering the design of the tax reform legislation for the "FairTax Act". To that person in comparing it to what it replaces it apparently was a "fair tax."
To others there is no such thing as a "Fair Tax" therefore they will continue to live with the Unfair Tax of a income/payroll tax system.
The politician's main goal is to successfully legislate a new tax hike without causing a riot.
And the electorate's roll is to riot at the polls if he tries. The Fair Tax Act, assures the riot at the polls as the income/payroll tax system does not. Seems to be a plus for a "Fair Tax" system to me.
"Imposts, excises, and, in general, all duties upon articles of consumption, may be compared to a fluid, which will, in time, find its level with the means of paying them. The amount to be contributed by each citizen will in a degree be at his own option, and can be regulated by an attention to his resources. The rich may be extravagant, the poor can be frugal; and private oppression may always be avoided by a judicious selection of objects proper for such impositions. "
"It is a signal advantage of taxes on articles of consumption that they contain in their own nature a security against excess.
They prescribe their own limit, which cannot be exceeded without defeating the end proposed - that is, an extension of the revenue."
The whole idea of saving on taxes by spending less is an anti-free market pipedream that would ruin the manufacturing economy.
Lets see, manufacturing no longer taxed allowing it to be more competitive in world markets = anti-free market pipe dream.
A tax free business climate creating a tax haven in the United States = an anti-free market pipe dream.
The same amount of taxes extracted from the economy under the Fair Tax retail sales tax = an anti-free market pipe dream.
The same type of tax system favored by Von Mises for Austria to recover from its socialist economy by turning to an entrepreneur driven recovery:
Ludwig von Mises as Policy Analyst: Monetary Reform, Fiscal Policy, and Foreign Exchange Controls by Richard M. Ebeling Heritage Lecture #754 http://www.heritage.org/Research/PoliticalPhilosophy/hl754.cfm#pgfId-1023417
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I could go on but the whole idea is such a joke that it's not worth my time.
Indeed the idea that you even wasted a visit to the FairTax website and spent all that useless time researching the value of going to a flat consumption tax system over a graduated income and payroll tax system that hinders free market growth markedly is the real joke:
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. "
Yep a tax free system on American manufacturing and entreprenuers is going to kill American GDP growth and drive American businesses away.</not>
The advantage for growth of industry in an international tax haven for industry.
Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee,
Rep. Bill Archer (R-TX)
August 12, 1996
- "A recent survey was done, in Europe and Japan, of the major corporations and I was astounded at the results. They were asked, 'If the US abolished its income tax and went to a sales tax, would that have any impact on your decisions?' Eighty percent of the corporations said they would build their factories in the United States of America. Twenty percent said they would move their international headquarters to the United States of America."
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