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To: Your Nightmare

No complete studies available on internet, addressing the FairTax legislation as it stands, that I can find.

Jorgenson represents the most comprehesive and complete study readily available that addresses the economic effects of the NRST. You want to find a more uptodate and more complete study go looking for yourself.

A drop in prices is a logical consequence of lower business costs as a result of repeal of business taxes coupled with competition for consumer dollar between business competitors and the tax free incentive for the individual to invest and save vs spend for consumption.

The Jorgenson estimate of an initial 20% decrease and continuing to fall across time is a consequence repeal of the income tax side of things only, and is only the more strongly asserted when one recognises addition savings to business from the additional repeal of payroll taxes.

If you want to doubt the potential for a decline of product prices in competitive markets thats your perogative.

I however am satified with the Jorgenson estimate as a lower boundry of the decrease in prices that can be expected in a constant dollar terms with full implementation of the HR25 Fair Tax legislation as it is currently written.


421 posted on 11/08/2004 7:35:40 AM PST by ancient_geezer
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To: ancient_geezer; lewislynn
No complete studies available on internet, addressing the FairTax legislation as it stands, that I can find.
So you are basing all of this on one line in one study. Even the authors of that study say their model overstates the true short run effects. But you refuse to even listen to the author opinions on their own model.


A drop in prices is a logical consequence of lower business costs as a result of repeal of business taxes coupled with competition for consumer dollar between business competitors and the tax free incentive for the individual to invest and save vs spend for consumption.
But a 22% drop isn't logical unless wages are reduced by the amount of payroll & income taxes workers were previously paying, which we both know is impossible. Look at the math, the numbers don't add up unless you include the employee's income and payroll taxes.
422 posted on 11/08/2004 9:09:04 AM PST by Your Nightmare
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