Posted on 01/13/2006 9:34:17 AM PST by Conservative Goddess
US Congress is about to increase the tax burden on exports of American-made goods and services. Why? Because the World Trade Organisation says it must. To avoid a trade war, Congress will probably go ahead and repeal the Foreign Sales Corporation, a tax relief device that has been used in one form or another for 30 years. But when Congress does repeal FSC, it should call a halt to the charade that forces the US to tax its exports, while allowing other countries not only to exempt exports from value-added tax but also to impose VAT on imports from the US.
The WTO says this huge distortion of free tradea net disadvantage for US exporters of more than $100 billion annuallyis justified because our corporate income tax is a "direct" tax, whereas tax on value added is an "indirect" tax. That distinction is a pernicious fiction, created and perpetuated by trade mandarins, that has no place in either logic or fact and no place in America's trade relations. Enough is enough, and Congress should so declare.
When it repeals FSC, it should also call on the European Union and all other countries to join the US in correcting the mistaken distinction between direct and indirect taxes. Congress should simultaneously urge US trading partners to cease exempting their exports from VAT and cease imposing those taxes on imports. If they do not amend their tax practices within a decent period, the US tax code should at least be amended to exclude export income from US corporate income tax and allow American-made goods and services a fair opportunity to compete in world markets.
The mistaken distinction between direct and indirect taxes dates from the late 1960s, when the French were converting their old "cascade" taxes on gross business receipts to new taxes on net business income that later came to be called value-added taxes. The French desperately wanted to exempt exports from VAT and impose it on imports, so their trade mandarins pretended that VAT was an indirect tax, like the duty on whisky. Our trade mandarins acquiesced, because that was the era of European reconstruction and dollar shortages. All the US asked was leeway to reduce the corporate tax on exports, a request that was consistently denied by the EU, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and its successor, the WTO. Today, the pretence is all that remainsand the enormous artificial trade advantage enjoyed by the EU and others.
For more than three decades, Congress has laboured under the false impression that basic principles of international law and economics having to do with direct and indirect taxes require the US to tax its exports in fullunless it joins other industrial countries and adopts a VAT system. Deep political misconceptions have made it impossible for Congress to consider the merits of value-added taxation. The EU and others, as part of a prolonged game of "Gotcha", have insisted that the only way the US can ever exempt its exports from tax is to adopt the European tax system. Who can blame the Europeans? In 1970, they pulled off one of the biggest trade heists in history and they want to keep their multibillion-dollar advantageeven though it is based on a false premise.
The false premise is the assumption that the economic burden of the VAT falls totally and uniformly on the purchasers of goods and services (like an excise tax on whisky), whereas the economic burden of the US corporate income tax falls totally and uniformly on the producers of goods and services (like a tax on property). But the predominant view today is that, in the absence of tax adjustments at the border, the economic burden of both corporate income tax and VAT falls primarily on the labour and capital that produce goods and services. In this sense, both taxes are direct taxes.
Whatever may have caused past presidents and Congresses to accept the false distinction between direct and indirect taxes, this Congress and this president should re-examine the issue as they repeal FSC, and think about what comes next. There is a compelling need for a coherent policy on the role that taxes play in distorting free trade. The stakes are high, payable in US jobs in sectors that make traded goods and services. In a global trading system free of distortions, US jobs lost to foreign competition are usually replaced by even better ones. But when US jobs go overseas because of tax distortions, something is badly wrong.
"National Sales Tax is unconstitutional"
... since it clearly is nothing of the sort. Please present your reasoning on why you think it might be. The FairTax is actually in the nature of an excise which certainly is specifically enumerated under the Constitution.
There have been threads on this in the past and the FairTax comes away with being as constitutional as can be.
Technically, the WTO would look the other way when other countries place sanctions on us. Do you see what you've done? You've set off the hedgtrimmer failure-of-logic alarm.
Too many sheeple just don't get it. They keep blaming corporations and businesses.
Sigh!! I don't know WHY we have to go back and plow this VERY old furrow again but I guess we must.
Hedgetrimmer I would ask you to please do us all the favor of going and reading this old thread before we continue with this discussion.
Stuff and nonsense. Check the link given in #47 for the detailed reading from a Profewaaor of Law at Georgetown where he teaches advanced constitutional law.
I'd certainly recognize his views over your odd notions unless you can demonstrate you have some similar legal/constitutional standing.
Thanks, Bigun.
Sorry ... "Professor" of course.
The last time the U.S. was required by the WTO to repeal provisions of the FSC, doing so involved savings of about $30-$40 billion/year in "subsidies." Chairman Bill Thomas of Ways & Means used that "savings" to fund general tax cuts for corporation, I think including the cuts in tax rates on capital gains and dividends, plus improved depreciation schedules, etc. This article says nothing about the amount of "savings" involved in this repeal of FSC. It must be substantial, or it would be no big deal. Do you have any idea how much?
The latest action forced by the WTO was the repeal of the Extra-Territorial Income Regime, aka "ETI"......but the impact of the repeal was spread across the board, not specifically targeted to exporters....as that was the crux of the WTO beef. Here's a link to the scoring of the final bill: http://www.house.gov/jct/x-68-04r.pdf
And here's a link to everything you ever wanted to know about HR 4520, The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004: http://waysandmeans.house.gov/Links.asp?section=1559&keywords=HR+4520
Here's a link to the Senate Finance Website, specifically "The Role of the Extraterritorial Income Exclusion Act in the International Competitiveness of U.S. Companies", where there was a LOT of REALLY GOOD testimony: http://www.finance.senate.gov/sitepages/2002HearingF.htm/hearing073002.htm
Thank you very much. Very thoughtful and helpful.
Great links, there, CG ... TYVM.
I note that the Catapillar, Inc. exec uses the figure of $5 billion for just the repeal of the EIT stuff. Wow.
Thank You for posting that link. That is very persuasive.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.