Posted on 11/03/2004 10:42:24 AM PST by tgusa
"I'm not exactly sure how big the national sales tax is going to have to be, but it's kind of an interesting idea that we ought to explore seriously," the president said. The next day administration officials said Bush was not considering such a reform.
John Kerry's campaign quickly condemned a national sales tax, and Bush for potentially supporting it.
If [Bush] has his way, every trip to the supermarket will feel like a visit to H&R Block and every day will be April 15. And now that this plan has been exposed, George W. Bush is trying to mislead the public into thinking it was just an off-the-cuff comment," Kerry spokesman Phil Singer said in an Aug. 12 statement.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
So what he is saying is that everyone dreads April 15th and everyone hate H&R Block.
If what he says is true, then we already have April 15th every day and we already are paying at the stores....we just aren't aware of it because the Socialist Communists in this country have cleverly disguised the income tax so not many people realize how much they are paying.
I say make April 15th tax day... and pay with one check that you write. Then have the election on April 16th.
I guaratee that people will then make the changes needed to get rid of the IRS and the parasites that live off the tax system.
HR 25 does allow everyone with valid SSN to receive the prebate.
318 Principled
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tgusa wrote:
I have been reminded that HR 25 would prebate everyone with a valid SSN. That is, everyone with a valid SSN,regardless of income level, would receive a check each month equal to one-twelfth of the annual prebate for poverty level income. I apologize for the confusion.
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A little side bonus of the prebate idea... -- Illegal aliens would not get a prebate, yet they would be paying the Fair Tax on every thing they bought.
-- Leveling the 'playing field' a bit..
And imports....
and our exports would be produced for 20-25% less for sale overseas
It is foolish to discuss implementation of a national sales tax without a concommitant repeal of the 16th Amendment. While I support the idea of a national sales tax, I do so only if the 16th Amendment is done away with. Otherwise, we will be taxed at a higher rate, not a lower one.
And many of us privacy-minded people and wealthy people wouldn't sign up for the prebate checks.
HR 25 makes taxing income illegal (not yet unconstitutional), erases the income tax code, and defunds the IRS.
As we sit today, we have zero protection against getting taxed by the income/payroll tax AND the sales tax.
At least implementing the sales tax provides protection against the income tax while the amendment is passed.
It would be hard to convince people & pols that withholding should start again. It would be hard to re-write and pass an income tax code.
Are the millions of small business owners that don't pay themselves wages, are their incomes reported to the government?Yes.
`SEC. 903. WAGES TO BE REPORTED TO SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
`(a) IN GENERAL- Employers shall submit such information to the Social Security Administration as is required by the Social Security Administration to calculate Social Security benefits under title II of the Social Security Act, including wages paid, in a form prescribed by the Secretary. A copy of the employer submission to the Social Security Administration relating to each employee shall be provided to each employee by the employer.
`(b) WAGES- For purposes of this section, the term `wages' means all cash remuneration for employment (including tips to an employee by third parties provided that the employer or employee maintains records documenting such tips) including self-employment income; except that such term shall not include--
`(1) any insurance benefits received (including death benefits);
`(2) pension or annuity benefits received;
`(3) tips received by an employee over $5,000 per year; and
`(4) benefits received under a government entitlement program (including Social Security benefits and unemployment compensation benefits).
`(c) SELF-EMPLOYMENT INCOME- For purposes of subsection (b), the term `self-employment income' means gross payments received for taxable property or services minus the sum of--
`(1) gross payments made for taxable property or services (without regard to whether tax was paid pursuant to section 101 on such taxable property or services), and
`(2) wages paid by the self-employed person to employees of the self-employed person.
And many of us privacy-minded people and wealthy people wouldn't sign up for the prebate checks.
Exactly. -- I'd bet that in time it would become declasse/unfashionable to take the prebate.
The train is rounding the crest. The momentum will be insurmountable. And increasingly welcomed as more and more people jump aboard..
As you know, government and the status quo are not the solution. Nor is the welfare state. They're the problem.
Increasing jobs. prosperity and health is the solution.
The government has one and only one purpose -- to protect life and private property rights as well as free-choice contracts from force and fraud.
Yes wages are still reported - note that it is wages that are reported, not income.That's all I said. Although self-employement income does have to be reported.
Again, -- it would be entirely voluntary to report your income. Granted, no reported income, no SS benefits later on.
Honesty outlives the lie. It always has. It always will.
Again, -- it would be entirely voluntary to report your income. Granted, no reported income, no SS benefits later on.
It says "shall," not "may." Doesn't sound like it's voluntary to me.
Employers shall submit such information to the Social Security Administration as is required by the Social Security Administration to calculate Social Security benefits under title II of the Social Security Act, including wages paid, in a form prescribed by the Secretary.
The government has one and only one purpose -- to protect life and private property rights as well as free-choice contracts from force and fraud.
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That's the real problem we're seeing here from the naysayers POV.
-- They WANT government to have more 'purpose', more control.
The Fair Tax threatens that agenda.
Employers 'shall'. This does not mean that individuals couldn't exempt themselves from the ~proposed~ scheme.
If you want to be honest, why don't you admit that your real objections to the Fair Tax are based on more than such petty [& changeable]
details?
That leaves a minimum of $1.8 trillion for business tax compliance costs! Most reasonable economists put the number around $100 billion. Let's double that to $200 billion to be fair, that leaves $1.6 trillion.
$1.6 Trillion looks to be about right for the additional burden imposed by the federal tax system, today.
Sorry, your $100 billion of compliance costs is not even close to the full story, that is only the direct labor involved in filing income tax forms, a small component of the total burden
Going onto TaxFoundation to look at what at origins of your $100-$200 billion number:
http://www.taxfoundation.org/compliance2002.html
Overhead Compliance CostsThe complexity generated by the growth and constant change of the tax code creates two general types of economic cost: overhead and opportunity cost. Overhead can be divided into three principal activities: the economically sterile exercises of tax planning, compliance, and litigation, all of which act like tax surcharges on taxpayers. *** snip ***
The Burden of Compliance CostsAs shown in Table 3, Table 4 and Table 5, the Tax Foundation estimates that in 2002 individuals, businesses and non-profits spent over 5.7 billion hours complying with the federal income tax. Using an hourly cost of $29.98 for individuals and $37.26 for businesses and non-profits, the estimated cost of compliance in 2002 is $194 billion (See Methodology section for details about how the hours and wages were determined)Individuals bear a cost of $86.1 billion, businesses bear a cost of $102.5 billion and non-profits bear a cost of $5.4 billion. Therefore, the overall compliance cost surcharge alone amounts to nearly 20.4 cents for every $1 collected by the federal income tax. |
As clearly laid out in AGC W&M committee testimony the overhead burden is much greater than those direct compliance costs alone:
American General Contractor's Association
|
Daniel Pilla puts the burden at 70 cents for each federal dollar collected in '95
Killing the IRS, By Daniel J. Pilla, Reason Magazine July 1995
"There is little about a flat-tax system that will trim the staggering cost of tax law compliance. At present, this burden is estimated at $700 billion annually. Much of the cost is associated with recordkeeping and tax law enforcement, neither of which is reduced by a flat tax. A flat tax certainly involves a simpler tax return, but return preparation is the smallest component of tax law compliance.
The solution to our tax problem is to adopt a national retail sales tax in place of the personal and corporate income tax.
Earnest Christian Junior confirms that '95 figure seeing close to $1 Trillion burden in addition to tax out of $1.4 Trillion in total tax federal tax revenues collected.
Chief Executive, The New directions in tax reform -
May 1995.Tax expert Ernest Christian Jr., a partner with Washington's Patton, Boggs & Blow, reckons these are low estimates or at best incomplete. Citing a U.S. Treasury study which indicates that 6 billion man-ours are consumed each year just in the record keeping for income and payroll tax returns alone, Christian says the true burden on the U.S. economy is probably closer to $1 trillion. For example, Jane Gravelle of the Congressional Research Service estimates that economic loss from the corporate income tax is equal to about 97 percent of the corporate tax revenue collected.
a sales tax can eliminate the invasiveness of the IRS, since one's income and lifestyle are irrelevant."
Dale Jorgens put the impact at $1.39 for every $1 of federal revenue collected in '97.
Again confirmed by studies by Jane Gravelle and Larry Kotlikoff.
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.
So I'm gonna take your word for it over the research of dozens of published experts... PhDs in economics, LLMs in taxation?
Ain't no lawyer, but hashing away, LOL.
"If the Fair tax is too difficult to implement by repealing the 16th Amendment, we should pass a flat income tax. It is VITAL that the IRS be eliminated with either plan!"
So which is it that you want - elimination of the IRS or implementation of a flat (income) tax? You do understand that those two are mutually exclusive, don't you?
Absolutely!
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