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The FairTax and it's Implications for the U.S. Economy (Part II of Income Tax)
OpinionEditorials.com ^ | December 05, 2005 | Chris Liakos

Posted on 12/05/2005 2:36:33 PM PST by Eaglewatcher

Imagine if all of these trillions of dollars were added back to the American economy. On top of that, imagine saving the $500 billion compliance costs every year. These two things would give a huge boost to the American economy. Fortunately, there is a plan to make this happen, a plan sponsored by Georgia Representative John Linder. The plan is called The FairTax, or H.R. 25. Part II of this paper will describe The FairTax.

Officially called the FairTax Act of 2005, the FairTax would do many things to simplify the way Americans pay taxes, including completely abolishing the Internal Revenue Service. The FairTax would replace many of the taxes Americans pay, including the individual income tax, the alternative minimum tax (AMT), corporate and business income taxes, capital gains taxes, Social Security taxes, Medicare taxes, the self-employment tax, estate taxes, and gift taxes (Boortz 74-5). The elimination of all of these taxes would allow workers to take home all of their paychecks. No withholding and no income taxes. That's right, people would get to choose when they had to pay money to the Federal Government, and that would be at the retail counter. Their money would not be forcibly taken from them.

Notice the word replace in the paragraph above. Many politicians tried using scare tactics in the 2004 election, telling the people that their opponents who supported the FairTax would be adding the FairTax on top of all those other taxes. This is simply not true (81-2). The FairTax would replace all of those taxes. The FairTax is neither a tax cut nor a tax hike, but an alternative method of gathering revenue for the Federal Government (75). Remember the 22-cents-out-of-every-dollar embedded taxes described in Part I of this paper? Take all of those taxes out, and institute a 23-cents-of-every-dollar consumption tax, and the prices of goods and services haven't changed much.

What is the FairTax? The FairTax is a proposed national consumption tax on new goods and services at the retail level. Only new goods are included for two reasons: First, goods should only be taxed once, not every time they change hands and second, taxing only new goods keeps things simple. Imagine the bureaucracy that would be needed for all people to keep track and correctly file their taxes whenever they sold their car, etc. We are trying to move away from all of that complexity!

In Part I of this paper, I mentioned the IRS tax code and how it exceeds 54,000 pages and 2.8 million words (Americans for Fair Taxation). Ordinary Americans do not have the time to interpret this abomination called the tax code. We have to pay others called CPAs (Certified Public Accountants) to do it for us. Think about this: we have to pay people money in order to pay the government money. How ridiculous! With the FairTax, businesses would just collect the consumption tax at the time of purchase, much like they already do in states where there is a sales tax. This saves time, and money. Americans will be paying the same amount of taxes, while not having to pay CPAs. More money in the pockets of Americans (generated by not having to waste time and money with CPAs) means that Americans will have more money to spend on consumer items, and thus will be creating even more tax revenue! Additionally, those 5.8 billion hours (Boortz 43) that I mentioned earlier will be spent on producing. When Americans as an aggregate spend 5.8 billion hours trying to pay the Federal Government money, they are not at their jobs or at home doing anything truly meaningful. They are, in essence, wasting time. With the FairTax, and without the IRS, those 5.8 billion hours would add to the economy, generating more income for people to spend, which would then generate more revenue for the government. Those hours would also allow for more quality of life, giving parents more time to spend with their kids, etc.

While companies are forced to make tax-decisions they are hindered in making economic and capitalistic decisions. Eliminating the income taxes, both personal and corporate, and instituting the FairTax would help businesses. This is especially true of small businesses.

"President Bush recognizes that supporting America’s small businesses is critical to ensuring continued job creation. Small businesses create two-thirds of new private sector jobs in America, employ more than half of all workers, and account for more than half of the output of our economy." (The White House)

Small businesses employ more than half of all workers and generate more than half of our economy. Wouldn't it make sense to help small business owners? Help them out, and what do you get? More employment and an extended production possibilities curve. What kinds of things hinder small businesses? Taxes, and more specifically, personal income taxes and self-employment taxes. Because small businesses are small, the owners typically pay taxes on the personal level or as small corporations. Because they are small, these taxes hit them much harder than they would a larger corporation. Eliminating these costs would allow all businesses, small and large, to focus their attention on producing goods and services, generating wealth for themselves and taxes for the government.

More people would be subject to this tax as well, thus generating more revenue for the government (I keep mentioning more revenue for the government; I know that the government needs to greatly reduce its spending, but that's another argument for another time). Who else would be paying into our tax system? Illegal immigrants and tourists. Think about it, under the current system, neither pay income taxes or Social Security taxes anyway, because illegals don't want to get caught, and tourists don't work here. With the FairTax, they would pay into the system with every purchase they made at the retail level. Some people dislike the idea that foreigners should pay into out system, but I don't and here's why: if they want the privilege of being in this country (whether working illegally or visiting legally), then they should contribute. Don't think for a minute that Americans don't pay Germany their Value Added Tax (VAT) when we buy their products.

The FairTax would also tap the large shadow economy of the United States. Whenever you buy the services of a landscaper, maid, house painter, or hot dog vendor, and you pay them in cash, it is not likely that they are reporting most if not all of that income, and this is known as the shadow economy. That income escapes the clutches of the Federal Government, but is that really fair? If you have to pay taxes on your income as a college professor, but I don't pay taxes on my income as a theoretical house painter, is that fair? The answer is no. Under the FairTax, we both keep all of our income, and pay taxes at the cash register. In his book, which I have cited often in this paper, Neal Boortz cites a 2000 survey claiming that the “shadow economy accounts for more than 10 percent if America's GDP. . .” (93 *). Maybe that kid who mows your grass doesn't pay an income tax on the money earned by his services, but he'll pay the consumption tax when he buys a new video game at Blockbuster.

Many jobs are sent overseas when American companies take their corporate headquarters and manufacturing plants there. Why would they move away? Under the current tax system, businesses are burdened by the regulations and costs associated with compliance. How much money is overseas? “[T]he 2000 Merrill Lynch & Gemini Consulting study World Wealth Report estimates that one third of he wealth of the world's high-net-worth individuals is held offshore. How much would that be? Try $11 trillion - $11 trillion sucked out of the American economy, all of it immune to the tax obligations you suffer every April 15” (Boortz 97). Think about the size of that number. $11 trillion is enough to give 11 million people a million dollars each. This $11 trillion is not in the American economy. This $11 trillion is not producing jobs in this country, nor is it investing in capital or technology in this country.

Let's start putting all of this together, assuming that the IRS has been abolished, and the 16th Amendment has been repealed. People get to take home their whole paycheck every week or two. Their employers can hire more people because they have more money and a higher production possibilities curve. The cost of goods and services stays about the same as before because the 23% consumption tax is about the same as the previous 22% embedded tax (that most people don't even know they were paying). The shadow economy is drastically reduced. Additionally, businesses from overseas begin to come home to this relatively tax-friendly environment, bringing with them even more jobs and capital. Sounding pretty good so far, right? Now for the Grand Finale: The Prebate.

Lyndon B. Johnson launched his War on Poverty in the mid-1960s, and so far, not much has happened. Let's try a new War on Poverty: The FairTax. With this newly implemented FairTax, lower-income workers are already getting to keep their whole paycheck. Most of them never paid any appreciable amount of income taxes, but now they are not having to pay withholding taxes either. They have more money in their pockets. Goods and services cost about the same as before, so already these lower-income workers are doing better than before the FairTax. Let's help them out even further. H.R. 25, or the FairTax, provides for a prebate on the basic necessities of life. A prebate would be a check from the government given monthly to all working Americans to cover their costs of taxes on essential goods and services at the poverty line. That's right, the government would give Americans, and we'll focus on lower income Americans, a check to cover the taxes needed to pay for food and shelter up to the poverty line (Boortz 85).

Think about this for another minute, not only would lower-income Americans have more money in their pockets, but the cost of taxes on goods and services (the bare essentials) up to the poverty line would be eliminated by this prebate. This would essentially lower the prices of these goods needed by lower-income workers. Here's how this all flows out: 22% embedded taxes are eliminated, 23% sales tax is implemented, all Americans receive checks to cover this 23% up to their determined poverty line, lowering the costs yet again. The combination of more income and lower costs would greatly increase the purchasing power of lower-income workers, and would do wonders for the anti-poverty movement.

The FairTax would allow all Americans to keep their whole paycheck, while cutting taxes on goods and services up to the poverty level. The FairTax would eliminate $500 billion of waste every year, putting 5.8 billion hours to better use. The FairTax would tap the purchasing power of both illegal workers as well as perfectly legal tourists. The FairTax would greatly reduce the shadow economy in our country. The FairTax would bring back $11 trillion to our country. The FairTax would utilize all of this to generate more money for the Federal Government. The FairTax would grow the economy and help lower-income Americans. The FairTax is “about making April 15 just another beautiful spring day. . .” (Boortz XV). The FairTax Book by Neal Boortz and Congressman John Linder is a must-read, both informative and entertaining.

Bibliography Boortz, Neal & John Linder. The FairTax Book. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2005.

* “Friedrich Schneider and Dominik H. Enste, “Shadow Economies: Size, Causes, and Consequences,” Journal of Economic Literature, 38 (March 2000), pp. 77-114.” Cited in Boortz' The FairTax Book, page 93.

McConnell, Campbell R. & Stanley L. Brue. Economics: Principles, Problems, and Policies. 16th ed. McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2005. Online. Americans for Fair Taxation. . Online. Tax Foundation. . Online. The White House: President George W. Bush.

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TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Government
KEYWORDS: economy; fair; fairtax; tax
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To: RobFromGa
Not true. Any purchase made for any business purpose would be exempt from FairTax. This will either be a mess for the retailer, or for the business owner trying to obtain rebates for the thousands of items purchased for business-- like all the expenses for the sales force.

Oh grow up. This is alreay in place for cities and states all over the country. Its not a mess its just normal operations, just like the handling of resale certificates which already is in place.

21 posted on 12/05/2005 5:18:43 PM PST by adamsjas
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Comment #22 Removed by Moderator

To: lewislynn
Uh huh and the discussion is about a federal sales tax. So what was your point again?

The point is that the retail sale happened in your local jueisdiction and the local tax authorities is who you deal with, that is who you send your sales tax to, and that is who audits you.

What part of this is so hard for you to understand?

Have you actually READ the legislation?

23 posted on 12/05/2005 5:22:01 PM PST by adamsjas
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To: balrog666
ou got that totally bass ackwards, you dumbass. It means they can stroll over to your business and rattle your cage every time they get a yen to do so.

I can see you've never run a business. So the conversation is over.

24 posted on 12/05/2005 5:23:30 PM PST by adamsjas
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To: balrog666
Yeah! It's easier to be honest and open with the IRS - especially when we have to prove our innocence instead of that silly idea of being presumed innocent until proven guilty.

And those IRS rules and regs are sooooo easy to follow that they can't even answer questions about the rules themselves!... hey...wait a minute...

It's you that has it backwards, dumbass, to use your phrase.

25 posted on 12/05/2005 5:25:25 PM PST by Principled
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Comment #26 Removed by Moderator

Comment #27 Removed by Moderator

To: adamsjas
Lewis will soon tell you that you are dumb beause he can't understand the simple math behind inclusive rates.

Then he'll tell you you're dumb because he can't understand how expenses incurred by a business end up in the prices of their goods and services.

THen, he'll tell you that anticpated or actual tax expenses have no bearing on prices whatsoever.

Really. He will.

28 posted on 12/05/2005 5:28:32 PM PST by Principled
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To: RobFromGa

Simply amazing how many of them reject economic and political reality.


29 posted on 12/05/2005 5:29:54 PM PST by balrog666 (A myth by any other name is still inane.)
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To: balrog666
Just how stupid are you FairTaxIdiots?

Wow! ANother damning indication of the fair tax doom! You want to measure the stupidity of something you call a "fairtaxidiot". Man, you anti-reformers have some really strong agruments against reform!

dolt.

30 posted on 12/05/2005 5:30:38 PM PST by Principled
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To: adamsjas
Have you actually READ the legislation?
It's you, not me that's new here.

You didn't answer:
A) At what point does a local/state tax collector collecting federal taxes NOT become a federal tax collector...And
B) If "the calculations involved for FairTax are EASIER than local sales tax", what is the Fairtax sales tax rate?

31 posted on 12/05/2005 5:31:07 PM PST by lewislynn
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To: balrog666
Simply amazing how many of them reject economic and political reality.

SImply amazing that you can say so much, yet have so little to say.

Simply amazing how many of you reject economic and political reality.

Not hard to type crap.

32 posted on 12/05/2005 5:32:16 PM PST by Principled
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To: lewislynn; adamsjas
He wants you to expain the rates to him because he doesn't understand it. Really.

If you try, he'll begin yelling about prepositions and calling you stupid. Just you wait.

33 posted on 12/05/2005 5:33:43 PM PST by Principled
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Comment #34 Removed by Moderator

To: balrog666

balrog666: You got that totally bass ackwards, you dumbass. 22

Thanks for so clearly discrediting yourself within the first eight words of your first post to the thread. You've proven, via your ad hominem, that you should be ignored.

35 posted on 12/05/2005 5:35:43 PM PST by Zon (Honesty outlives the lie, spin and deception -- It always has -- It always will.)
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To: balrog666
You haven't refuted our arguments from the last 100 threads on the federal sales tax, why would you want us to post them again? Go read the link in post #14 and kiss your FairTaxCrap goodbye.

Golly, I'm dissappointed that balrog knows the future and it excludes tax reform. Alas.

It is you that hasn't refuted our arguments from the last 100 threads on the federal sales tax, why would you want us to post them again? Go read the link in post #14 and kiss your income tax goodbye..

I need to write a bot to repeat your crap. he he he dolt.

36 posted on 12/05/2005 5:37:40 PM PST by Principled
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To: Principled
He wants you to expain the rates to him because he doesn't understand it. Really.
Can you show an example of a Fairtax receipt showing the sales tax rate...Really, can you?
37 posted on 12/05/2005 5:38:33 PM PST by lewislynn
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To: lewislynn
Can you show an example of a Fairtax receipt showing the sales tax rate...

Um, lewis, it hasn't passed yet.

38 posted on 12/05/2005 5:39:19 PM PST by Principled
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To: RobFromGa
Nice of you to post your vanity post so we can all admire it endlessly as you hope we'll do.

Trouble is, Rob, that it is off base and you've been repeatedly corrected about it. There has never been any premise of a free lunch - except that phraseology dreamed up by your SQL folk in a pathetic attempt to ridicule the FairTax.

"The whole idea of keeping your whole paycheck and prices staying the same has been repudiated by Neal Boortz and John Linder now. The FairTax requires either cuts in gross pay, or large increases in the price of every good and service. "

These two sentences are outright lies as there has been no such "repudiation" as you claim nor does the FairTax require any pay cuts or price increases. That is merely part of your incessant fearmongering to scare those who have not looked into the FairTax website. Like some other of your claims about an inflated tax rate, there is no credence to the claims. You Squirrels are famous for this tactic.

In fact, we now know that all along your preference has been to retain the income tax (while you pretended or even stated otherwise for several months) so you may as well drop your pretense that you are, somehow, a disinterested observer. The FairTax supporters make no pretense and are openly for the FairTax yet so many of you guys like to hide behind dishonest guises perhaps because you think it gives your notions more weight (it doens't ... just the opposite in fact). We see a bit of that in this post when you hide behind a fake veil of "neutrality" until you finally 'fess up to being for the income tax.

Your groundless statement about "compliance" problems is just that as there are none. Nor is there a rebate problem as has been pointed out to you on several occasions since the easiest mechanism by far is endorsed in the language of the FairTax bill and that mechanism is presently in use in most states which obviates any rebate need - the resale certificate; and it protects the seller as well. Nothing could be simpler. Your strawmen are burning up right and left because of the incendiary lies you're putting out there. Do you suppose they will be left to stand unopposed when they are so patently false?

39 posted on 12/05/2005 5:39:51 PM PST by pigdog
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To: Willie Green
Willie, We've been here before son. You really need to stop perpetuating the myth that Scientologists are behind the FairTax.

While it is true that the IRS hounded the 'Church' of Scientology, there is no truth to the assertion that Scientologists are behind this legislation.

Here's a link to the case: http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=us&vol=490&invol=680
40 posted on 12/05/2005 5:41:44 PM PST by Conservative Goddess (Politiae legibus, non leges politiis, adaptandae)
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