Although one of the proposals is being touted as a Use or Consumption Based Tax, flat tax that is based on use, it is really not, it is truly a federal sales tax being disguised.
There, I fixed it.
Lets see the "Flat Tax" which is a tax on employee's wages and coroporate profits is "truly a federal sales tax being disguised."
Yep you fixed it alright, for the "Flat Tax" is being touted as a federal sales tax being disguised.
A type of VAT, as a matter of fact, as the originators of the "Flat Tax" and others describe it.
The Flat Tax; Chapter 3, by Robert Hall and Alvin Rabushka
- Here is the logic of our system, stripped to basics: We want to tax consumption. The public does one of two things with its incomespends it or invests it. We can measure consumption as income minus investment. A really simple tax would just have each firm pay tax on the total amount of income generated by the firm less that firms investment in plant and equipment. The value-added tax works just that way. But a value-added tax is unfair because it is not progressive. Thats why we break the tax in two. The firm pays tax on all the income generated at the firm except the income paid to its workers. The workers pay tax on what they earn, and the tax they pay is progressive.
- To measure the total amount of income generated at a business, the best approach is to take the total receipts of the firm over the year and subtract the payments the firm has made to its workers and suppliers. This approach guarantees a comprehensive tax base. The successful value-added taxes in Europe work this way.
- The other piece is the wage tax. Each family pays 19 percent of its wage, salary, and pension income over a family allowance (the allowance makes the system progressive). The base for the compensation tax is total wages, salaries, and retirement benefits less the total amount of family allowances.
|
FLAT TAX, VAT TAX, ANYTHING BUT THAT TAX; Duke Law Magazine, Spring 96:
- "The flat tax is essentially a VAT, with a personalized element for wages. Thus, the business tax allows deduction of all purchases -- as does a VAT -- but also allows deduction of wages. The wage income that is taken out of the VAT base, however, is also taxed, but is assessed against the individual wage-earner, not against the business."
- The Hall-Rabushka flat tax, and its Armey and Specter variants, would replace the current personal and corporate income taxes with a new tax that is conceptually identical to a "subtraction-method" value-added tax, a version of a national sales tax, with two major modifications: First, imports would be exempt from the flat tax, while exports would be subject to tax. Second, to mitigate the regressivity of the VAT, cash wages, pensions received and other cash earned income would be taken out of the VAT base (i.e., deducted by businesses) and taxed directly to individuals, with exemptions. Thus, structurally, the flat tax is exactly equal to a value-added tax with an import incentive, an export disincentive and a personal rebate based on a percentage of a capped amount of cash wages, pensions and other earned income.Businesses compute a typical "subtraction-method" value-added tax by adding up their taxable gross receipts and subtracting the cost of previously taxed items. Thus, in computing the VAT, businesses deduct their purchases from other businesses, whether for supplies, services, machines, land or whatever. (In another, more common form of a value-added tax, known as a "credit-invoice" VAT, businesses get a tax credit for taxes paid on purchased items. In general, this produces the same result as a "subtraction-method" VAT.) Ultimately, the total tax base for a VAT is equal to retail sales of taxable items, and a VAT is thus equivalent to a retail sales tax. As noted, however, the flat tax base differs from a usual VAT, however, in that wages are deducted by businesses, and taxed at the personal level
"Fixed"??? Hardly since a flat tax has most of the failings of any income-based tax and in the (not so) long run will be right back to where we are today.