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National Retail Sales Tax - You gotta be kidding!
GOPNATION.COM ^ | January 31, 2005 | Steve Pudlo

Posted on 01/31/2005 7:12:16 AM PST by bmweezer

For quite some time now there has been an organization pushing for a National Retail Sales Tax (NRST) to replace the current income tax in the US of A. The proponents thereof call it a "fair tax", and even have a web site www.fairtax.org. These folks claim that the current income tax structure is a crumbling mess, and that the NRST, a "voluntary" tax is the most equitable solution. For what it's worth, I agree wholeheartedly upon the first premise, but disagree vehemently on the second.

The NRST would be no more voluntary that the current system. What are you gonna do? Buy something and tell the cashier not to add the federal tax? Or not buy anything? (multiply that by every taxpayer and imagine the effect on the economy). And if you believe the proponents claim that they can put enough safeguards in place to make their system painless and equitable, then I have a bridge in New York that you can buy cheap.

The NRST would, by definition be a highly regressive system that would hurt the middle class far more than the wealthy, and if it ain't complicated enough in the planning stage, just wait a few years. Tax accountants wouldn't' be in any real jeopardy under the NRST, they would just have to learn a few new rules. Since the nature of any government program is to increase in complexity, watch for tax changes to increase this or decrease that, then try to factor in the cost of compliance with all this going on - guess who's gonna pay?

The premise that spending is a taxable activity is silly on the face of it. I remember my ex-wife complaining after I spent my last dime on a badly needed item "If you have $50 for that, then I can spend $50 on what I want". The proponents seem to believe that if I have 500 to spend on a badly needed washing machine, that I can also pony up another 40% or so for their agenda. This is ludicrous and insulting to the intelligence of the voting public. Just because I have 500 dollars, doesn't mean that I have 700. Just like my ex refused to believe that if I had 50 dollars for one item that I couldn't magically conjure up another 50 dollars for her. Fifty dollars is fifty dollars. It isn't an indication, hint, or promise that there's a matching fifty dollars lying around for everybody else's ideal. And under the NRST proposal, if I don't have the 700, then I can't buy the 500 washing machine. So since I don't have the 700 bucks, I don't buy the appliance. The seller doesn't make the sale, the manufacturer doesn't' get to make another one to replace it on the shelf, the deliverer doesn't get to deliver it. Everybody loses.

But wait! The NRST proponents cheerfully remind me that "large purchases" such as major appliances and automobiles would be exempt from the NRST. Ah! The first major complication. What is and what is not covered. So maybe a set of dishes would be covered. Would we care to look into what this little statement would mean? In a very few years we will inevitably see merchandise gerrymandering as to what would be taxable and what wouldn't. And someone would have to keep track of all this. I remember in Connecticut where a 75-cent milkshake was taxed six cents for a nickel's worth of malt, but the same sized milk was untaxed. Food was taxed but only if it cost one dollar or more. Clothing was taxed unless it was for a child under ten years of age. One customer buying a jacket had to pay the tax, but another didn't have to because of the age of the child. Can you keep track of this? Multiply this by the political agendas of congresscritters all over the country,. And you can see what I mean by merchandise gerrymandering.

Quite simply, it would mean that the increasing tax burden would be spread to more items of lesser value, therefore having a greater impact upon the final purchase price. So the government would have to get more from less. So the "Fair tax" might end up making that $40 set of dishes cost $80 or more. So what would be the result? Fewer people buy dishes. People who make and sell dishes would do less business, and therefore they would be hurt. The customer would be hurt by the loss of the use of the new dishes, the whole economy would take such a hit that it would take years, if not decades to recover. Discretionary purchasing could evaporate overnight.

Would there be exemptions for lower income people so that each person pays a tax burden more in line with their ability to pay? Would certain people be able to carry a tax avoidance card to not have to pay taxes due to their economic status? How would you protect the poor - who also need to buy things like dishes every now and again?

Let's look at this another way. Perhaps a person like me must spend 80 to 90 percent of their income on living expenses. Much of that would be subject to the NRST. So more of my money, as a percentage of income, would be taxed. Now let us look at someone like Bill Gates, or Ted Kennedy. Since they have vast incomes compared to me, they can afford to shelter more of their income into other areas. If the NRST is the major tax vehicle, then they would only be taxed upon the much smaller percentage of their incomes that they spend on living expenses. Because they can afford to sock away lots more money than I do, that money would not be taxed as it isn't "spent"! Yes, I know that Gates and Kennedy spend more than I do, but as a percentage of their total income, it is less. So the NRST favors the rich at the expense of the middle class!

But the NRST folks won't tell you that. In fact, they'll flatly deny it hoping that you don't notice the vast amounts of income that the very rich sock away into investments, etc. that wouldn't be taxed (unless they want yet another complication in their system), and focus our attention upon their SUV's. The net gain for the rich would have to be made up for by the rest of us - resulting in a higher tax rate for the middle class and for the poor. The poor subsidizing the rich - reverse Robin Hood!

Let's go back now to the concept that people spend a predictable portion of their income. Every person has basic needs - food, housing, clothing, etc. that must be met. These needs are similar for everyone across the income spectrum. To the extent that these items will be subject to the NRST, everybody pays the same flat fee. If your income is above the minimum, then you can spend a little more, which would be taxable, and perhaps sock a little away. That would not be taxable, apparently, so you gain an incentive not to spend, not to buy. That amounts to putting a damper on the economy in the area of discretional spending. Maybe I don't need those new dishes after all. Multiplied by the number of people who would be affected by the NRST, you have a serious downturn in the economy, resulting in loss of jobs, wages, resulting in severe economic hardships for just about all of the middle class. Of course, the rich wouldn't be affected as much.

So let's look again. The more you make, the less a percentage of your income you need to meet your basic needs. That means that you don't have to spend so much of your money to live. You can shelter more from the government, an option not available to the lower income brackets who often lead hand-to-mouth existences. They'd be the ones hit the hardest. This is the definition of regressive taxation. The social consequences are considerable, and beyond what I am prepared to discuss at this point, but there are historical precedents that are not good.

But wouldn't you benefit from an immediate pay raise by the amount you would normally pay in income taxes? Certainly, and I would welcome that. However, since the entire tax burden on the whole country would remain constant (which means ever-increasing), and since the rich would be paying less overall taxes (the richest 5% pay 85% of income taxes, or something like that), that loss of governmental income would have to be made up by people like me, so logically, there cannot be anything but a net loss for me - I'd end up subsidizing the likes of Kennedy and Gates!

And let us not forget that complication in that some things would be taxed while others would not be taxed. This would be a boon to the politicians - in that they can reap huge amounts of revenue simply by adding an item to the "Taxable" column, it would have a huge negative impact upon those who would be doing the collecting. Oh yeah - remember those? That burden would fall upon business owners and establishments that sell taxable items to the public. The reasoning of the NRST crowd seems to be that if they can collect income taxes for the state, they can collect for the feds. No prob. What they overlook is the increased cost to these businesses, many of them barely breaking even, to collect the deferral taxes. Not only must they follow the whims of state politicians, but they would have to attune themselves to the federal politicians as well! They'd have to absorb the costs of the paperwork required, increased bookkeeping, reprogramming computers, etc.. But you and I know full well that these costs would have to be passed on to us customers. So again, we will pay more for less. OR at least the middle class will. And presumably the poor - unless the poor become exempt, in which a whole new level of beauracracy would be needed - and we know who will have to pay those costs!

Let me give you an example. Support toothpaste isn't taxable. Then some politician figures out that the taxes on a three dollar tube of toothpaste can pay for the next congressional pay raise. It's only a buck or so, so the average guy won't get too upset, but that dollar turns into more than one dollar when you factor in the costs of reprogramming grocery store computers all over the country to reflect that this item is now taxable. So the price increase is closer to a buck fifty. Then some other politician wants to be reelected, so he proposes eliminating the tax on laundry detergent. Here we go again. That one - dollar price decrease translates into a mere 50 cents by the time compliance expense is factored in.

And nowhere would there be any addressing the real problem of federal taxation - the spending glut. The feds are simply spending too much money. The more they get, the more they spend, the government simply cannot exercise any fiscal restraint. The federal government has never had a revenue problem they've always had a spending problem. They spend too much. Where would be the incentive for them to spend less if we give them new pockets to pick?

The solution to the tax problem isn't a misnomer - a "fair tax" in name only, it will have to be a system in which everybody bears a share of the burden commensurate to their ability to pay, not their need to spend. It has been said that if everybody had to pay a fair share of the total tax burden, that people would demand reduced federal spending. THAT is the solution to the problem. Or at least, create a viable environment for the kind of fiscal triage that has been sore lacking in all levels of government.

First of all, I would propose to classify all monies coming into an individual as income. Investments, capital gains, interest, wages, compensation - anything coming IN will be classified as income. All incoming monies are income, all income is treated the same. That income would be taxed at a flat percentage, and that percentage would be the same for everybody. If Ted Kennedy pays the same percentage of income that I do, he still pays a lot more, whether he spends more than I do or not. If someone who makes less than I do has to pay the same percentage, they pay less, more fitting to their abilities.

Nothing would affect people's ability to buy dishes, cars, or anything else because purchasing would be relatively independent of taxation. If you don't' tax it, you don't stand in the way of people who want it. You don't collapse the whole economy for the sake of a political agenda. Purchasing would be minimally affected.

If people don't want to pay their fair share (I would even tax welfare because everybody should be stakeholders), then they can get after their representatives to cut spending. I predict a huge groundswell, and things like beekeeper subsidies and research in to the sex lives of insects would be subject to a lot more scrutiny, and spending would go down. That solves the problem.

The "fair tax" is highly unfair. It hurts far more than the middle class. It only helps the rich - those with the highest proportion of discretionary income. The NRST cannot help but hurt the working classes, the welfare classes, small businesses, and the national economy. The proponents of the NRST dangle the tax deductions in your paycheck like a carrot before your eyes, so that you don't see the huge stick that you're gonna get whacked with if this goes through. I predict that if the NRST gets passed, that within two years there will be a depression that would be far worse and longer lasting than the "Great depression" of the 20's.

Oh! And finally - they claim that they will get rid of the IRS. Really? Who's gonna police the collectors to make sure they collect the right taxes from the right goods?

Can you say "we're being hoodwinked?"


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government
KEYWORDS: fairtax; repeal16thamendment; taxes; taxreform
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To: AppyPappy
It makes that $6,000 tax on a car a bit easier to accept.

And never mind that @ 25% of a price of a new car is imbedded taxes already. Which would disappear. And that if you buy a used car, you pay ZERO sales tax.

21 posted on 01/31/2005 7:24:17 AM PST by Phantom Lord (Advantages are taken, not handed out)
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To: Paul C. Jesup
By the way, food, clothing and medicine are excluded from the NRST that is being preposed.

Not true. Every new item is taxed under the NRST, but the Family Consumption Allowance (as mentioned above), allows people to decide for themselves what their necessities are.

22 posted on 01/31/2005 7:24:45 AM PST by kevkrom (If people are free to do as they wish, they are almost certain not to do as Utopian planners wish)
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To: bmweezer
To quote Alexander Hamilton in The Federalist Papers

"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. If inequalities should arise in some States from duties on particular objects, these will, in all probability, be counterbalanced by proportional inequalities in other States, from the duties on other objects. In the course of time and things, an equilibrium, as far as it is attainable in so complicated a subject, will be established everywhere. Or, if inequalities should still exist, they would neither be so great in their degree, so uniform in their operation, nor so odious in their appearance, as those which would necessarily spring from quotas, upon any scale that can possibly be devised."
23 posted on 01/31/2005 7:25:05 AM PST by mike182d
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To: T.Smith

Correct. The only caveat I would add to the plan for a national sales tax is that it must also include a repeal of the 16th Amendment, otherwise we will end up with both. The other benefit to this plan is that people will be constantly reminded of exactly how much they pay in tax since they will have to pay it with each purchase. It would no longer be painlessly deducted before you even see it. This might have the effect of finally providing incentive to hold the line on spending, at least in the voter's mind! The cost of government programs will be transmitted directly to the consumer, both large and small.


24 posted on 01/31/2005 7:25:34 AM PST by PeterPhilly
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To: Gabz
Sales taxes are regressive....and hurt those with lesser incomes far more than those higher up the economic scale.

Gabz, I really respect you and agree with so many of your posts it isn't funny. I have a favor to ask: please please please take a really good look at the proposed NRST--basic necessities aren't taxed, the costs of tax compliance are removed from EVERY STAGE of production and prices are lowered, the government is OUT of your pocket and doesn't need to know what you have or what you earn, and a huge politicized sick behemoth (current tax law) is given the swift death it has earned.

25 posted on 01/31/2005 7:26:32 AM PST by Judith Anne (Thank you St. Jude for favors granted.)
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To: Gabz

There are provisions for that too. The tax is not on everything. It would replace a lot of existing taxes as well rather than being lumped on top. Depends on which proposal you read.


26 posted on 01/31/2005 7:26:33 AM PST by Conspiracy Guy (If only I used my evil genius for good !)
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To: kevkrom
Actually, it's the opposite -- consumer spending is more predicatble than income.

Really? Then I've been gravely misinformed :-) Are there any reports that you know of off-hand that you could direct me to for further consideration?
27 posted on 01/31/2005 7:27:45 AM PST by mike182d
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To: RockinRight

As far as I know, they do........thus my being able to see both sides of this.

Who makes the arbitrary decision of what is a necessity? Fertilzer is a necessity for a farmer, but not for a Wall Street executive. An automobile is a necessity for someone in a rural area with no mass transit, but not for a city dweller.


28 posted on 01/31/2005 7:27:56 AM PST by Gabz (Anti-smoker gnatzies...small minds buzzing in your business..............SWAT'EM)
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To: bmweezer
What a torturous read.

Who's gonna police the collectors to make sure they collect the right taxes from the right goods?

Who does now?

29 posted on 01/31/2005 7:28:14 AM PST by eyespysomething (I'm speechless here, but don't worry, it won't last long. Ask my husband.)
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To: kevkrom
How someone can be so misinformed about the topic they're writing about and expect to be taken seriously is beyond comprehension.

EXACTLY! The same can be said for those who say "A NRST would hurt the poor" or "A NRST would hurt retirees".

Nothing could be further from the truth and anytime you hear folks arguing against the NRST based on this sort of logic it is proof they either don't understand the concept or they don't want to understand the concept.

Taxes are power. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

30 posted on 01/31/2005 7:28:15 AM PST by Thermalseeker
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To: bmweezer

I can understand the idea to a degree, but it would kill small businesses like mine to a degree. At least with the figures I have heard being provide to how much the tax would be.


31 posted on 01/31/2005 7:28:21 AM PST by BoBToMatoE
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To: kevkrom

I agree. He is misinformed. It's more like 50%.


32 posted on 01/31/2005 7:30:00 AM PST by robertpaulsen
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To: Gabz
Fertilzer is a necessity for a farmer

Nit-pick -- that's not a retail expense, assuming the farmer is actually growing food commercially, and so would not be taxed. The NRST is not a VAT, it only applies to retail sales. (Of course, a home gardener would pay tax on his/her fertilizer, since that's for personal, not business, use.)

33 posted on 01/31/2005 7:30:13 AM PST by kevkrom (If people are free to do as they wish, they are almost certain not to do as Utopian planners wish)
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To: kevkrom

Again, I can see both sides of the issue.

If I had my druthers, the first way I would like to see taxes fairly dealt with is to get rid of most government bureaucracy.....but alas, I'm not in charge.


34 posted on 01/31/2005 7:30:27 AM PST by Gabz (Anti-smoker gnatzies...small minds buzzing in your business..............SWAT'EM)
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To: kevkrom; ancient_geezer
By the way, food, clothing and medicine are excluded from the NRST that is being preposed.

Not true. Every new item is taxed under the NRST, but the Family Consumption Allowance (as mentioned above), allows people to decide for themselves what their necessities are.

A.G., kevkrom is under the false belief that food, clothing and medicine will be taxed under the NRST preposed in the House and Senate.

A.G. since you know more about this subject, could you point out the error in his thinking.

35 posted on 01/31/2005 7:30:40 AM PST by Paul C. Jesup
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To: T.Smith
With respect to #7, Lenin and Marx had a plan as well. You know what is said about plans and opinions, they are like a......s, everybody has one and they all stink.

If this piece is and indication of the acceptance of the so called fair tax then stick a fork in it, it is all done. There will be a national sales tax however, it will be levied on top of the income tax and will be earmarked for things like prescription drugs or social security.

I may be wrong, but I am dead set against any sales tax as it is the easiest way for the government to confiscate property against our will.
36 posted on 01/31/2005 7:30:45 AM PST by Final Authority
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To: AppyPappy
Yes, he is ignoring the fact that the NRST is meant to replace the income tax, and that he is already ponying up that 40%.

And then he turns around and brings up spending, which makes the point of the NRST right there. Spending will never go down as long as politicians can hide taxation by turning corporations into tax collectors.

37 posted on 01/31/2005 7:30:47 AM PST by hopespringseternal
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To: Conspiracy Guy
The height of idiocy is to throw the bomb of a consumption tax into the middle of a consumption based economy, and then assume that all the previous economic models would remain in effect.

They wouldn't, and the idea of destroying the economy in order to try to get a tiny amount taxes out of gang bangers and pushers as well as to achieve the equality of impoverishment of the middle class is so loaded with stupid that its laughable.

38 posted on 01/31/2005 7:31:14 AM PST by Le Seigneur De Porc
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To: bmweezer

One thing I like about a sales tax is that it does a better job of taxing the underground economy. Illegals et al still shop in regular stores.


39 posted on 01/31/2005 7:31:34 AM PST by Vince Ferrer
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To: robertpaulsen
It's more like 50%.

You make a statement like that, you'd better be able to show me the math. So, I humbly request that you show me how you came up with that number.

40 posted on 01/31/2005 7:31:50 AM PST by kevkrom (If people are free to do as they wish, they are almost certain not to do as Utopian planners wish)
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