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Pushing 'FairTax' to replace 'monstrosity'
The Houston Chronicle ^ | 16 Apr 2004 | By RAD SALLEE

Posted on 04/16/2004 12:20:39 PM PDT by esarlls3

April 15, 2004, 11:09PM

Pushing 'FairTax' to replace 'monstrosity'

DeLay, other lawmakers urge tax code reform

By RAD SALLEE

Copyright 2004 Houston Chronicle

Now that the dreaded deadline is past and the tax forms are in the mail, consider this question: Would you rather slog through a morass of paperwork every April to send Uncle Sam a chunk of your income or have the sales clerk take 23 cents in tax out of every dollar you spend?

U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Sugar Land, and Republican U.S. Reps. Kevin Brady and John Culberson chose the perfect downtown stage Thursday to promote the second choice, which they call the FairTax.

As about 100 supporters, most of them members of the group Americans for Fair Taxation, rallied outside the Main Post Office at 401 Franklin, a steady stream of cars and trucks rolled through the driveway to drop off last-day tax returns.

Also on hand was Rep. John Linder, R-Georgia, sponsor of the FairTax bill, HR25. Linder said the campaign for the proposal, technically a consumption tax on retail sales, was launched in Houston by businessmen, including Leo Linbeck and Bob McNair.

Linder said Culberson's predecessor, Bill Archer, supported the idea, which has gotten a big boost with DeLay on board.

"Now it's time for Texans to get the president behind the bill," he said.

DeLay described the Internal Revenue Code as "a 1.6-million-word, job-killing monstrosity ... written by tax lawyers to be incomprehensible."

The FairTax would not only be simpler, he said, but also would replace the personal income tax, corporate income tax, capital gains tax, inheritance and gift taxes and Social Security-Medicare taxes.

It would not replace state and local sales taxes, however.

Culberson said the FairTax would be collected like a sales tax and would not penalize taxpayers for saving and investing their money instead of spending it.

Linder said the FairTax would increase saving and investing, expand the economy and help stanch the flow of U.S. dollars and jobs overseas.

Skeptics note, however, that a rich man's purchase of a yacht and a widow's winter coat would both be taxed at the same rate -- about 23 percent at current federal revenue levels.

Food and medicine would be taxed, too. The only purchases exempted would be used goods, business expenses and the costs of education, which would be treated as an investment.

To ease the burden on the poor, each family -- rich or poor -- would get rebates equal to the federally defined poverty-level income, multiplied by the tax rate. At a rate of 23 cents per dollar, a single person living alone would receive $160 a month and a family of four with two children would get $431 a month.

Joe Barnes, a research fellow at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy, said junking the income tax for a simpler alternative is a tempting idea fraught with unknown consequences.

"I'm very sympathetic to consumption-based taxation, but I have profound misgivings about its workability," Barnes said.

For one thing, he said, experience in Europe indicates that when similar taxes climb to about 20 percent, cheating becomes widespread. Because an enforcement mechanism will be needed, he said, "It will not lead to the abolition of the IRS."

"I think it would lead to gigantic off-balance-sheet transactions," Barnes said.

The tax would seldom be paid on personal services, he predicted, and there would be temptations to falsely claim purchases as business expenses.

Barnes said there also would be intense political pressure to exempt some expenses, such as medical care, food and housing, from the tax. For every exemption, he noted, the tax rate on other goods must increase to maintain the same revenue.

ON THE INTERNET FairTax proposal www.fairtax.org and www.ctj.org


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: axixofevil; fairtax; taxreform
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1 posted on 04/16/2004 12:20:39 PM PDT by esarlls3
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To: esarlls3
AP Story from same event:
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/printstory.mpl/metropolitan/2508756
April 15, 2004, 5:03PM

Tax day rally calls for end of federal income taxes

Associated Press

On the day many Americans scramble to pay their taxes, U.S. House Majority Leader Tom DeLay and more than 100 other people rallied outside a post office today to abolish federal income taxes.

"The tax system in this country is an unmitigated mess," said DeLay, R-Sugar Land. "The code is getting longer, more complicated. Things don't have to be this way. Instead we can throw the internal revenue code in the garbage, where it belongs."

DeLay and members of Americans for Fair Taxation were joined by other GOP congressman calling for a voluntary, single-rate sales tax on goods and services, eliminating all federal income taxes.

DeLay said the fair tax proposal is the answer to reducing the deficit and the catalyst for creating more and better jobs.

U.S. Rep. John Linder, a Georgia Republican who has sponsored the Fairfax Act in Congress, told people at the rally that DeLay's support of the legislation will help legitimize it.

"No one should know as much about us as the IRS," he said.

Linder's proposal would replace all income taxes with a 23 percent across-the-board sales tax.

Most Democrats and many Republicans say the plan is far from fair. They complain it regressively hurts poorer people who spend a higher percentage of their income while more affluent people are able to save and invest.

Linder has said he would accommodate for that by sending all taxpayers a check each month reimbursing them for the taxes on essentials such as food, shelter and clothing.

"You should only pay a tax when you make the decision to buy something," said U.S. Rep. John Culberson, R-Houston.

Ira B. Shepard, a law professor at the University of Houston, said replacing the federal income tax with only a sales tax will not generate enough funds for the government.

"People do not avoid the sales tax on items even though in Texas it is 8.25 percent because it is not worth doing," said Shepard, who specializes in tax law. "But you triple that Texas sales tax and you will have people planning to avoid that tax. There's a certain rate at which people will begin to generally try to avoid a sales tax."

Shepard said he could envision some people smuggling some items to avoid paying the across-the-board sales tax on them.

But Shepard was sympathetic to the efforts by Linder and Americans for Fair Taxation to reform the federal tax system.

"I think something has to be done before we all drown in the molasses of the complexity" of the tax system, he said. "At a certain point, you can't fix up your old house, you have to tear it down and put a new one there."

2 posted on 04/16/2004 12:23:13 PM PDT by esarlls3
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To: *Taxreform; ancient_geezer
Tax reform ping.

Interesting that the first thing the bill's detractors do is claim that it's regressive. Then when that is shot out of the water, they immediatly start talking about evasion and "cheating" -- as if this never, ever happens under the income tax.

3 posted on 04/16/2004 12:28:11 PM PDT by kevkrom (The John Kerry Songbook: www.imakrom.com/kerrysongs)
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To: esarlls3
Tax Reform gaining STEAM!


4 posted on 04/16/2004 12:31:44 PM PDT by xrp
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To: esarlls3
Joe Barnes, a research fellow at Rice University's Baker Institute for Public Policy, said junking the income tax for a simpler alternative is a tempting idea fraught with unknown consequences.

Aa opposed to what the income tax was when it was first passed in 1913.

5 posted on 04/16/2004 12:35:37 PM PDT by Maceman (Too nuanced for a bumper sticker)
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To: esarlls3
Cable news channel story from same event:
http://www.news24houston.com/content/top_stories/default.asp?ArID=27323
Note: Source link includes link to 3 minute video coverage of event.

www.news24houston.com

Income tax opponents push for national sales tax

Updated: 4/15/2004 8:19:27 PM
By: Melissa Blasius

Inside the downtown post office, procrastinators were still getting forms trying to beat the midnight federal income tax deadline.

Outside, dozens of people protested the IRS and the U.S. tax structure.

“Nobody understands how the tax code works anymore, and its problems are getting worse. The tax code is getting longer, more complicated and more time consuming to obey,” House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R) says.

They want to eliminate all payroll taxes, meaning income tax, social security and Medicare taxes and replace those with a national sales tax tacked on to everything you buy new.

As a result consumers would have to pay about 23 cents in tax per dollar spent.

But opponents of this national sales tax say it’s not fair at all especially to people in lower income brackets.

That's because people who are low and middle income tend to spend more of their paycheck immediately vs. wealthier people who save and invest more.

National sales tax supporters say they have a solution for that.

“We have a rebate that ensures that no one living at or below the poverty level pays any tax whatsoever,” Tom Wright from Americans for Fair Taxation says.

That sounds good to people we caught up with rushing to pay Uncle Sam.

“Because I feel like I pay more than my fair share,” one taxpayer says.

“I think it would be wonderful because I don't spend that much, so I think I would get a break,” another taxpayer says.

But in order to change the tax system, these Republican leaders have to convince colleagues on Capital Hill.

Democratic Congressman Chris Bell says he doesn't know if this sales tax is feasible.

“A lot of people have misgivings about the IRS, especially this time of the year. But if you are going to talk about replacing it, you have to replace it with something responsible. And something that won't have a great loss of revenue,” Bell says.

The national retail sales tax, also known as a consumption tax, would apply to all new purchases but not to used goods.

A Georgia congressman is sponsoring a bill on the tax but it's unclear when or not it will ever make it to the House floor for debate.

Copyright © 2004 TWEAN d.b.a. News 24 Houston

6 posted on 04/16/2004 12:37:59 PM PDT by esarlls3
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To: ancient_geezer; Action-America
FairTax Bump for Houston Rally
7 posted on 04/16/2004 12:39:27 PM PDT by esarlls3
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To: esarlls3
Barnes said there also would be intense political pressure to exempt some expenses, such as medical care, food and housing, from the tax. For every exemption, he noted, the tax rate on other goods must increase to maintain the same revenue.

It seems to me that housing would have to be exempted...how would anyone ever get financing when they would immediately lose equity on buying a new house? (If a $100,000 home now costs $123,000.) Anyone more familiar with the proposal that can help me understand this?

8 posted on 04/16/2004 12:41:20 PM PDT by ozidar
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To: esarlls3
I don't want to get a check from the government.

Here's a better method, one that has its origins in the Constitutional framework. The US taxes should be aportioned among the states. For example, California should be assessed 53/435 of the total amount needed, Georgia should pay 13/425, New York would pay 29/435, Wyoming would pay 1/435 and so on.

The states could raise the money in any manner they so chose to. They could raise tobacco taxes, gas taxes, real estate taxes or whatever. The point is, the local politicians (where the people have the most clout) could be held accountable for their profligate ways of the free-wheeling DC reps. Our local representatives would become our advocates instead of our rulers.

Companies could uproot to more favorable states where lower corporate taxes, or prescribed benefits, or regulations prevailed. Businesses could not be setup as tax fountains. People would be able to flee free-spending states, which would then lose their political power. The pressure would come from local pols to hold down Federal spending because there would be more visibility of the free loot being sent to influential mobs or constituents.

9 posted on 04/16/2004 12:41:46 PM PDT by Sgt_Schultze
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To: esarlls3
Barnes said there also would be intense political pressure to exempt some expenses, such as medical care, food and housing, from the tax. For every exemption, he noted, the tax rate on other goods must increase to maintain the same revenue.

Its because of morons like this that the current tax code is so complicated.

10 posted on 04/16/2004 12:47:11 PM PDT by Orbiting_Rosie's_Head
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To: esarlls3
The tax would seldom be paid on personal services, he predicted, and there would be temptations to falsely claim purchases as business expenses.

I know people who use their sales tax exemption certificates to get around Texas' 6% sales tax. If the Feds created a 30% sales tax, I'd consider getting a sales tax exemption cert, too. This idea is completely unworkable.

11 posted on 04/16/2004 12:47:33 PM PDT by SolidSupplySide
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To: Sgt_Schultze
Not bad at all. But sorry, it makes too much sense. Try again.
12 posted on 04/16/2004 12:47:43 PM PDT by Mr. Bird (Ain't the beer cold!)
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To: *Taxreform; Taxman; Principled; Bigun; EternalVigilance; kevkrom; n-tres-ted; Poohbah; CliffC; ...
A Taxreform bump for you all.

If you would like to be added to this ping list let me know.

John Linder in the House & Saxby Chambliss Senate, offer a comprehensive bill to kill all income and payroll taxes outright, and provide a IRS free replacement in the form of a pure consumption tax:

H.R.25, S.1493
A bill to promote freedom, fairness, and economic opportunity by repealing the income tax and other taxes, abolishing the Internal Revenue Service, and enacting a national retail sales tax to be administered primarily by the States.

Refer: http://www.fairtax.org & http://www.salestax.org


13 posted on 04/16/2004 12:49:59 PM PDT by ancient_geezer (Equality, the French disease: Everyone is equal beneath the guillotine.)
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To: ozidar
(If a $100,000 home now costs $123,000.)

The way the article is written (and the way sales tax proponents present the idea) is misleading. As the article says, the government gets 23% of every dollar you spend. Your $100,000 house would cost about $130,000.

23% of $130,000 is about $30,000, the cost of your house.

14 posted on 04/16/2004 12:57:50 PM PDT by SolidSupplySide
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To: SolidSupplySide
23% of $130,000 is about $30,000, the cost of your house.

Should have read:

23% of $130,000 is about $30,000, leaving $100,000, the cost of your house.

15 posted on 04/16/2004 12:59:30 PM PDT by SolidSupplySide
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To: kevkrom
Then when that is shot out of the water, they immediatly start talking about evasion and "cheating" -- as if this never, ever happens under the income tax.

It happens, but it would be much easier under a consumption tax. On the low end, it would be rife, IMO. Particularly on services.

16 posted on 04/16/2004 12:59:37 PM PDT by Protagoras (When they asked me what I thought of freedom in America,,, I said I thought it would be a good idea.)
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To: esarlls3
This sounds very interesting. I would be concerned, however, that it would kill any industries that rely on tax free contributions. I imagine that a great number of charitable organizations would die a quick and sudden death.
17 posted on 04/16/2004 1:00:21 PM PDT by lews
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To: Protagoras
On the low end, it would be rife, IMO. Particularly on services.

On the high end, it would be rife, too.

Say you're buying a new set of tires - $250. If you evade the tax on this single transaction, you save $75. The reward of evasion is very great compared to the chance you'd get caught in this single act.

18 posted on 04/16/2004 1:03:29 PM PDT by SolidSupplySide
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To: SolidSupplySide
Your $100,000 house would cost about $130,000.

No, the $100,000 house would cost $100,000, with 23% of the taxable amount(*) of that $100,000 being remitted as taxes. the NRST is a repalcement tax, not an additional one.

(*) The taxable amount on a new house would be the amount over the valuation of the unimproved property -- the property itself is "used" by definition. A resale house would have no sales tax since it is considered previously taxed.

19 posted on 04/16/2004 1:05:14 PM PDT by kevkrom (The John Kerry Songbook: www.imakrom.com/kerrysongs)
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To: SolidSupplySide
Say you're buying a new set of tires - $250. If you evade the tax on this single transaction, you save $75. The reward of evasion is very great compared to the chance you'd get caught in this single act.

This type of evasion requires the collusion of two parties, not just a single cheater.

20 posted on 04/16/2004 1:06:11 PM PDT by kevkrom (The John Kerry Songbook: www.imakrom.com/kerrysongs)
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