Posted on 09/17/2006 7:55:38 PM PDT by pigdog
My name is David Burton. I am a partner in the Argus Group, a small public policy firm based in Virginia. I have a particular interest in, and awareness of, the problems of small businesses for a number of reasons. I worked for many years in my familys furniture and pool table manufacturing business stopping only once I was well into law school. I worked as the CFO and general counsel of a small 80 employee multinational manufacturing company. I also regard small businesses and farmers as the greatest source of dynamism, innovation, upward mobility and community strength in this country.
I appear today on behalf of Americans for Fair Taxation, also known as Fairtax.org. It is the nations largest grass roots citizens organization dedicated to fundamental tax reform. We appreciate the opportunity to present our views regarding the proposals offered by the Presidents Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform and on fundamental tax reform generally.
With the exception of tax lawyers, tax preparation firms, tax software firms and more than a few tax professors, almost everyone supports tax reform. However, without establishing criteria describing what constitutes genuine and constructive tax reform, it is impossible to assess the relative merits of the various plans or even to decide whether a plan would be constructive. This testimony sets forth criteria we believe that policy-makers should adopt for purposes of assessing fundamental tax reform plans, including the Tax Panels proposals. These criteria are not exhaustive but they are the most important.
In general, a reformed tax system should be fair and should minimize the adverse economic impact of raising the revenue that Congress decides is necessary to fund the federal government. A tax reform plan that meets the following twelve specific criteria will accomplish the twin goals of being fair and maximizing the economic prosperity of the American people. The FairTax best meets these criteria and, indeed, was designed to do so. Assuming the Tax Panels proposals were enacted as proposed, they would constitute only a modest improvement over current law and would likely degenerate quickly into something barely distinguishable from the present system.
The Criteria for Fundamental Tax Reform
Prosperity Criteria
1. The plan should not be biased toward consumption and against savings and investment but rather it should be neutral between different types of consumption, savings and investment.
2. The plan should have the lowest possible marginal tax rates, removing to the greatest extent possible the disincentive to work, save and invest and providing the greatest opportunity for upward mobility.
3. The plan should be neutral between whether to produce in the U.S. or abroad; it should not provide an artificial incentive to move jobs and production overseas.
4. The plan should impose the same tax burden on all forms of productive activity and should tax each activity at a uniform rate.
5. The plan should treat human capital formation and physical capital formation alike.
6. The plan should dramatically reduce the administrative and compliance burden on the public.
Fairness Criteria
The plan should exempt the poor from tax and allow everyone to meet the necessities of life before paying tax. Once the necessities of life have been met, however, the plan should treat people equally with favoring one set of taxpayers over another and by taxing the same proportion of goods and services they purchase for their own personal use. The plan should not play favorites or reward the politically powerful or well connected.
Civic Criteria
The plan should be transparent and understandable so the public understands the tax system; it should not hide the true tax burden or obfuscate. The plan should be politically stable, so that the reform will last The plan should have a manageable transition
The prosperity criteria are those that will maximize economic growth and prosperity. The fairness criteria are those that we believe most Americans accept. The civic criteria are those that promote a healthy body politic and improve our political process.
The Plans
This testimony will consider:
The Tax Panels Simplified Income Tax Plan (chapter six of the report) The Tax Panels Growth and Investment Plan (chapter seven of the report) The FairTax (H.R. 25, S. 25) A business transfer tax (BTT) The flat tax (of the Hall-Rabushka type)
The FairTax has been introduced in the House and the Senate. It replaces the individual and corporate income tax, all payroll taxes and the estate and gift tax with a 23 percent national retail sales tax on all consumption of goods and service without exception. A rebate would be provided monthly in advance to all households equal to the poverty level times 23 percent. An extra amount is provided to married couples to prevent a marriage penalty.
The Business Transfer Tax is a subtraction method value added tax. The overall tax base is the value of all goods and services produced minus investment. It is collected from businesses using administrative means similar to the corporate tax. It is border adjusted. It has the same tax base, in principle, as a retail sales tax.
The flat tax is a form of value added tax where the tax on capital value added is taxed at the business level and labor value added is taxed at the individual level. Since investment is expensed and savings are accorded Roth IRA type treatment, it is a form of consumption tax. It is, like the income tax, an origin principle tax; thus imports are exempt from tax and exports are taxed. The administrative means used to collect the tax is similar to the current tax system.
Neutrality Between Consumption and Savings
Capital formation promotes greater productivity and output, higher rates of economic growth, and improved competitiveness. More capital per worker, embodying the latest technical innovations means more output, greater competitiveness and higher real wages. The current tax system, however, is very biased against savings and investment, often taxing the returns to savings or investment three or four times. This results in slower economic growth, reduced competitiveness and lower real wages. The solution is to adopt a tax system that is neutral toward savings and investment. The FairTax, the flat tax, a business transfer tax would address this issue decisively. In all three plans, labor and capital output is taxed equally and one time. In the flat tax and BTT this is accomplished by expensing capital investment and treating all savings effectively as if they were in Roth IRAs. In the FairTax, this result is achieved simply by taxing only final consumption and not taxing business inputs. Unlike in most state sales taxes, the FairTax does not hide taxes and impose a tax on a tax. It taxes goods and service once when sold to consumers.
The Tax Panels Growth and Investment Plan reduces the bias against savings and investment. However, the imposition of an extra 15 percent tax -- over and above the 30 percent business tax -- on dividends, interest and capital gains and the retention of the estate and gift tax constitutes a significant bias against investment and savings. The Simplified Income Tax Plan reduces the double taxation of corporate income but otherwise retains much of the bias against savings and investment inherent in current law.
Lowest Possible Marginal Tax Rates
High marginal tax rates reduce the incentive to work, save and invest and therefore reduce the amount people choose to work, to save and to invest. As tax rates are raised, overall economic output declines. Conversely, reducing marginal tax rates has dramatic positive economic effects.
The FairTax has the lowest marginal tax rates of any plan and is the most pro-growth of any plan considered. It has the broadest possible consumption tax base and a single tax rate. The FairTax base is equal to that of the BTT. It is larger than the flat tax, primarily due to the fact that the U.S. current imports dramatically more than it exports. The FairTax is unique in that it replaces the 15.3 percent payroll tax and since the FairTax base is broader than the payroll tax base, it reduces marginal tax rates further than any tax plan being considered.
When comparing the FairTax to other tax plans it is important to remember that the FairTax repeals the 15.3 percent payroll taxes (both Social Security and Medicare employment taxes and self-employment taxes). A flat tax with a rate of 17 or 20 percent, for example, is really a 32.3 or 35.3 percent tax on labor or self-employment income. Similarly, the Tax Panels two proposals have top tax rates on labor income of 45.3 percent. In some cases, the Tax Panels plans raise marginal tax rates. In most, the reductions are quite minor.
Neutrality Between U.S. and Foreign Producers
The current tax system imposes high income and payroll taxes on U.S. producers and workers whether they are selling in the U.S. market or abroad. The current tax system imposes little or no tax on goods imported into the U.S or services provided to U.S. consumers from abroad. Compared to our OECD trading partners, this places American producers at a roughly 18 percent competitive disadvantage, courtesy of the U.S. tax system.
It is no wonder that firms that remain in the U.S. find it difficult to compete. It is no wonder that manufacturing output and employment have fallen roughly since our competitors started adopting border adjusted taxes. Even our agricultural surplus has largely disappeared. The U.S. government, through its tax policy is telling American firms that they are idiots to continue producing in the U.S. since the U.S. government will tax them heavily if they produce goods here but impose no tax on goods purchased abroad.
In contrast to the U.S., every other significant trading country in the world raises a large part of its revenue from destination principle, border adjusted consumption taxes. Most use the value added tax but some (for example Canada) rely to some extent on sales taxes. These taxes are not levied on exports from those countries to the U.S. but are imposed on U.S. goods imported into their country.
The FairTax would by the very nature of a sales tax remediate this problem by taxing foreign and U.S. goods alike when sold at retail. It would, for the first time, eliminate the advantage accorded to foreign producers by current federal tax policy. A BTT would also address this issue by excluding exports from its tax base and by imposing the tax on imports. The Tax Panels Growth and Investment Plan would also be border adjusted. However, since the WTO only allows indirect taxes to be border adjusted, it is doubtful whether the Tax Panels plan, which is structured like a direct tax, would survive a challenge at the WTO. Sales taxes are explicitly permitted under WTO rules. Neither the flat tax or the Simplified Income Tax Plan would address the problem. Even the Tax Panel itself recognized that its proposal would probably fail WTO scrutiny.
Neutrality Between Different Types of Productive Activity
The FairTax treats all goods and services alike. Thus, it does not distort the marketplace and allows businesses to adopt the most efficient economic means to meet consumer wants. A plan that taxes economic activity uniformly will promote the most efficient, productive economy. The flat tax and BTT would also do this (except, as mentioned below, as to labor income because of the retention of the payroll tax). Although the Tax Panels plans would reduce these distortions, they retain major distortions in the marketplace, including the health care, housing and investment markets.
Neutrality Between Human Capital and Physical Capital
Human capital is a critical element in productivity and innovation. The FairTax is the only tax reform plan to grant human capital parity with physical capital. The FairTax accomplishes this result by not taxing tuition or job training or educational wages in either the government or private sector. This is appropriate since the primary reason most people pursue an education is to increase their future earnings capacity and the expenditures generated by those future earnings will be taxed. Tuition and job training are an investment in human capital.
The flat tax does not address this problem. Education is treated like a consumption good and must be purchased with after flat tax and after payroll tax dollars. The Tax Panels proposals do not really address this issue; all they do is afford some savings for educational purposes consumption tax treatment.
Reduce the Compliance Burden on the Public
The current tax system has major tax evasion problems notwithstanding billions of tax and information returns filed each year, roughly 6 billion hours spent figuring out the tax due, and an army of tax preparers, tax accountants, tax lawyers and IRS personnel. We waste nearly $300 billion annually complying with the current tax system. The time spent figuring our taxes is more people than the hours spent working in the auto industry, the computer manufacturing industry, the airline manufacturing industry and the steel industry combined.
The Tax Panels proposals would reduce this waste slightly. The flat tax would reduce it substantially, at least until the political process turned it back into something similar to what we have today. However, the flat tax does require all Americans to file tax returns and would retain withholding and payroll taxes rules.
The FairTax would radically reduce these costs and the complexity of the system. Individuals who were not in business for themselves would never need to fill out a tax return again. Moreover, the FairTax compensates businesses for the time required to fill out sales tax returns with a credit equal to ¼ of one percent of the sales tax remitted.
Under the FairTax, the question a business or auditor would need to answer is how much was sold to consumers. This is a simple question not that different from line 1 on a tax return today. Under the FairTax, that would effectively be that. All of the major sources of complexity today would be repealed. Gone would be payroll and income tax withholding, 1099 reporting, inventory tax accounting (including the uniform capitalization rules), tax depreciation accounting and recapture rules, tracking tax basis, the alternative minimum tax, qualified plan rules (including top-heavy, participation and vesting rules), international tax rules, capital gains rules, passive loss limitations, estate and gift tax planning and a host of other rules.
Small businesses are disproportionately harmed today by the large compliance burden imposed by the current tax system. They would disproportionately gain from implementation of the FairTax.
Exempt the Poor
It does not make a great deal of sense to impose taxes on poor people. Neither, however, does it make sense to hide from them the cost of government. The poor cannot even meet their basic needs and are receiving financial assistance in many ways. Yet today, they pay significant taxes. Part of those taxes are the payroll taxes imposed on the working poor. But the poor also bear the burden of paying higher prices for the goods they buy because of the taxes imposed on businesses and the cost incurred by businesses to comply with the tax system. Businesses, after all, must recover all of their costs, including taxes, in the price of the goods they sell. If they do not, they will quickly go out of business.
Because of the rebate, the FairTax is progressive. The effective tax rate climbs as expenditures climb. The effective tax rate is negative or zero for the poor, it is quite low for the lower middle class. The effective tax rate for a married couple with two children with taxable spending of $51,320 would have been 11 ½ percent in 2005. The very rich would pay nearly 23 percent on their spending.
The FairTax is the only plan that entirely untaxes the poor. It accomplishes this by providing every household in America with a rebate paid monthly in advance equal to 23 percent of the poverty level (plus an extra amount in the case of married couples to prevent a marriage penalty). This, in effect, protects every household in America from paying any tax on spending up to the poverty level which means that no poor person is paying any sales tax and that no household is paying sales tax on the necessities of life.
By repealing the payroll tax, the FairTax eliminates the greatest burden on the working poor and reduces the cost of hiring new, entry level workers. By repealing business taxes, hidden taxes that must be recovered by businesses in the price of goods sold are repealed.
All other plans keep the payroll tax, which is the largest tax paid by poor Americans. No other plan is structured to ensure that no poor person will pay any tax. No other plan ensures that all households may meet the necessities of life without paying tax.
Equality of Treatment
The FairTax treats people equally on spending over the poverty level. It does not favor one set of taxpayers over another or one type of producer over another. It taxing everyone at a uniform rate on goods and services they purchase for their own personal use.
The flat tax moves in the right direction but retains the payroll tax which taxes labor income at different tax rates depending on the level of their income and does not tax capital income. The Tax Panels proposals retain many tax preferences and treat people differently depending on the degree to which they are willing to structure their lives in a way approved of by government. In addition, the Tax Panel retains graduated tax rates which punish people who choose to work hard, study hard, save and invest.
Should Not Play Favorites
It is unfair for the government to play favorites, rewarding certain politically powerful and well-connected interests over others that do not have the same political pull. The tax system should be about do what is right and just rather than what will help fill campaign coffers and satisfy interest groups. The FairTax treats everyone alike and does not exempt any person, any good or any service from tax. The rules are simple and clear and apply to everyone.
The Tax Panels proposals continue the practice of rewarding certain interests, although the proposals do reduce the scope of tax preferences compared to current law. The flat tax would largely eliminate the favoritism of current law. It does, however, retain on major favorite. Foreign produced goods are favored over U.S. produced goods. A BTT would not play favorites either and would treat foreign and U.S. produced goods and services alike.
Transparency and Comprehensibility
The FairTax is the easiest of any tax reform plan to understand. That is its virtue and its vice. It is a simple sales tax with a single tax rate.
It does not divide up the publics tax burden among four or five low tax rate taxes, some of which are hidden from view, that add up to very high tax rates. The FairTax has one very transparent tax rate which, in reality, is the lowest marginal tax rate by far of any tax reform plan. Yet because the FairTax is honest and transparent and the current tax system is anything but honest and transparent, FairTax detractors are able to obfuscate, demagogue and confuse by misrepresenting the facts.
Who knows who pays the corporate tax? Most people small businesses and self-employed people being obvious exceptions do not even know about the massive employer payroll taxes that drive their wages down. Most people have only the vaguest idea of what they pay in income taxes today and why since the taxes are withheld and, as often as not, they used paid preparers or software to figure their tax.
The Tax Panels plans are complex and retain most of the complexity of the current system. The flat tax is relatively simple, yet even many of its most vocal proponents seem to think it is an income tax rather than a consumption tax. They do not even understand their own proposal.
Only the FairTax is simple and can be easily understood by anyone. Under the FairTax, people will understand for the first time in their lifetime how the federal government is actually paid for and who is paying for it.
Political Stability
If the flat tax is kept as it is but with graduated rates, it becomes what is often called the X-tax, a graduated rate consumption tax. The flat tax can be easily changed by to an income tax. Starting with the flat tax, if we depreciate capital rather than expense it, make inventory purchases deductible when the inventory is sold rather than when purchased, make interest taxable and deductible, then we have largely converted the flat tax into an income tax. Add a few special interest deductions, credits and exclusions and when are very nearly back to where we started. That is a very real problem with the flat tax. It is very easy to corrupt its design and eliminate many of the gains to be had from adopting the proposal in the first place. The entire administrative apparatus of the income and payroll tax system is retained and it would be very easy to go back. Attempts to do so would start immediately.
If the FairTax were enacted, it would much more difficult to go back to an income tax system. The entire massive and expensive administrative apparatus built up over nine decades would be dismantled. It is doubtful that people would want to go back. It is doubtful that they would want to invest the massive resources necessary to do so. The FairTax, then, is a stable reform. There will, of course, be the necessity to fend off those who want to exempt one category or another of goods or services. But if the rebate system is in place, the most commonly used line of argument (we need to help the poor) will fall flat. There will always be better ways to help the poor than exempting some category of goods.
Transition
The flat tax sidesteps transition issues. It is, however, unlikely that in the final analysis Congress will force businesses to lose trillions of dollars of basis on capital assets if the income generated by those assets remains subject to tax. To do so would amount to wealth loss for existing capital owners of well over a trillion dollars to American businesses. Addressing this transition issue, will force the flat tax rate (or a BTT rate) to climb considerably.
There is no need to be concerned with basis per se in the FairTax since income streams are no longer subject to tax. Businesses will not get far complaining that their tax rate has been reduced to zero. The analogous problem in the FairTax is the sale of goods subject to FairTax that were not deducted for income tax purposes. Collecting sales tax and failing to allow an income tax deduction would effectively be double taxation. The FairTax legislation addresses this issue by providing a credit to businesses selling inventory held on the changeover date to prevent the double taxation.
There is a general danger, however, when considering transition to want to compensate every loss. In fact, in most cases where there are losses, there is someone experiencing an equal and offsetting windfall gain on the other side of the transaction. These gains should be taxed to compensate losses (if they exist) because if the loss is unjust then so is the unexpected and windfall gain at anothers expense. Moreover, many of the claimed losses on capital assets will in reality be illusory because assets price will in general increase due to according consumption tax treatment to investment.
Some Specific Notes on the Impact on Small Businesses and Farms
The current system has a disproportionately adverse impact on small businesses because of the high compliance costs that consume a relatively large share of small business income and because of the many ways the current system singles out small businesses for discriminatory tax treatment.
The FairTax addresses this issue by radically simplifying the tax law, reducing compliance costs and compensating businesses for their time complying with the system. The FairTax also repeals payroll taxes, which have a disproportionately negative impact on small businesses both because of administrative cost, the self-employment tax and the increased cost of labor. Finally, the FairTax will help small manufacturers and farmers compete against foreign goods in U.S. or foreign markets by taking the taxes out of exports and by taxing U.S. and foreign goods alike in U.S. markets. Many larger U.S. companies have already outsourced a huge portion of their manufacturing or are planning to do so. Small companies located here do not really have the option of outsourcing their manufacturing since they do not generally have both manufacturing and distributional divisions.
No other plan addresses these needs of small businesses as directly and effectively as the FairTax. BTT proposals tend not to address payroll tax issues. The flat tax does not address either payroll tax issues or level the playing field with imports. The Tax Panels proposals would only moderately improve the current system.
Grading the Plans
The analysis above demonstrated that the FairTax is the most pro-growth and most Fair tax plan being considered in Congress. It showed that the Tax Panels proposals were seriously deficient. It showed that the BTT and the flat tax would constitute a significant improvement over current law. The chart below is a summary of these findings.
Criteria Tax Tax Flat Business FairTax Panel Panel Tax Transfer Income Growth Tax Tax ======================================================== P1. Neutral Toward Savings C C+ A A+ A+ and Investment -------------------------------------------------------- P2. Low C C B+ A- A+ Marginal Tax Rates -------------------------------------------------------- P3. Neutral F A D A+ A+ Between Foreign and U.S. Producers -------------------------------------------------------- P4. Taxing C+ C+ A- A- A Economic Activity Uniformly -------------------------------------------------------- P5. Neutral F F F F A Between Human (usually) and Physical Capital -------------------------------------------------------- P6. Reduce C- C B B A+ Compliance Costs -------------------------------------------------------- F1. Poor B B B- B- A+ Untaxed -------------------------------------------------------- F2. Equal and D D+ B B+ A+ Uniform Taxation -------------------------------------------------------- F3.No Favorites D D A- A- A+ or Special Exceptions --------------------------------------------------------- C1.Transparency C C B B- A+ and Understandability -------------------------------------------------------- C2. Politically F D C B A Stable -------------------------------------------------------- C3. Manageable A A B B B+ Transition --------------------------------------------------------
Overall D C B B+ A+ Grade
Conclusion.
The proposals offered by the Presidents Tax Panel are a major disappointment. They represent modest progress compared to present law. But the progress they offer is quite small and unlikely to last very long given the nature of the political process.
The flat tax is a highly constructive proposal, but compares unfavorably where it differs from either a sales tax or a BTT. Moreover, because it retains the administrative apparatus of the income and payroll tax, it is likely to revert back toward an income tax. Finally, by retaining payroll taxes, its rates on labor income are unnecessarily high and the tax burden on poor and lower middle income persons is higher than the FairTax.
The FairTax is the best plan being considered. It is extremely pro-growth. It would cause dramatically higher investment, large productivity gains and higher real wages. It would improve the competitiveness of U.S. producers. It would improve the well-being of the average American dramatically. It would dramatically reduce the vast amount wasted each year on compliance costs. It would untax the poor and be progressive. It would tax people based on what they consumed for themselves rather than what they invested in the community or gave to charities. It would get the government out of the business of playing favorites and rewarding politically powerful interests. It is transparent and understandable. It will lead to a more just and more prosperous America. It is the best plan.
We urge you to cosponsor the legislation and to work with your colleagues to enact it into law so that the American people can, at last, have the tax system they deserve.
NO it isn't. It IS a study that exposes the hidden costs of the current tax system however. Those costs accumulate somewhere. They don't just evaporate into the ether!
So YOU say but I STILL have seen no scholorly refutation of it!
Yes the Fair Tax will collect the same if not more revenue for the government but it will remove playing favorites which is what the poster you replied to was insinuating I believe.
In other words it doesn't matter how many dollars flow into the government, what matters is how that money flow is channeled and who controls the channel gates. Tax law is what controls the gates and every legislator has their hands in crafting more tax laws. In short, that is what elected office boils down to, how many tax gates can be influenced.
If the Fair Tax Reform was passed, Congress would have to succumb to a budget rather than cut deals on tax breaks.
I believe the Fair Tax will pass in 2019, just about the time when the dire consequences of demographics force an overthrow of the present system.
Unfortunately Americans wait until they suffer a 'Pearl Harbor' before they resolve to fix their messes, and even then, as in 9/11, resolve may be weakened over time. And we will wait until the present system crashes before reforming anything. The coming changes in demographics will spur the tax revolution.
2019.
The only hope for a sooner development is some sort of Fair Tax zone experiment, where all residents and resident businesses (with strict definition of residence) of certain geographic zones (because most people are geographic based) would be treated under a Fair Tax system.
Why, when reading your posts, does this (below) old addage come to mind?
If you are not part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.
What is your proposal - and how does it stack up against this possible solution.
PS - If you favor status quo - don't worry about the point by point comparison, it isn't needed.
The biggest problem is controlling spending and I don't see a 30% sales tax as a solution but a bigger problem. If I were to design new tax system it would be a combination of income and sales tax, with a much lower and flatter income tax and a much lower sales tax without the prebate but one that does exclue food and housing. There are three major problems with this proposal, besides all the dishonesty that is done pimping it:
1. It delinks Social Security from payroll. It will make social security into a bigger entitlement program than it is today, where the people who pay into it aren't the ones who neccessarily get the benefit. For instance, retirees who have already paid a lifetime of social security taxes, will now have to pay social security taxes everytime they buy something. They are paying social security taxes on their social security benefits.
2. The fairtax prebate is a new $600 Billion entitlement program in which every American gets a monthly check whether they pay taxes or not. This will be the biggest entitlement program ever.
3. 30% tax is too high and the way the tax is designed it can only result in an immediate 20% inflation. The high rate will increase tax avoidance and initially have a big negative impact on the economy.
There are several legitimate advantages to a sales tax, but doing an all out switch is a real dumb idea. I don't oppose reform, I oppose dumb ideas.
So YOU say but I STILL have seen no scholorly refutation of it!Then you haven't looked. Here's one, two, and three (at least). And there are others that discredit the ADL study directly. If you are truly interested (which I doubt), it shouldn't be hard to find some damning criticisms of the ADL study.
They don't just evaporate into the ether!But that's exactly what you and pigdog theorize...The exact words are "POOF! GONE!!"
The "hidden taxes" themselves (since they are not taxes but unproductive price increases) do not need to be replaced by a revenue neutral FairTax. Instead they are removed - POOF! Gone!!Someone is in ether.
It just does not sink into fairtaxers that these 'unproductive price increases' are business profits. And what fairtaxers just seem to assume is that businesses will happily take cuts in their profits so everyone else can have more money. It's all part of the fairy magic that goes into their 'analysis'.
I'm sorry that you cannot grasp that fact but it is, never-the-less, a fact.
I am sorry but that is simply incorrect. The costs in question are costs imposed by the tax system itself and, as such, CANNOT be profits.
Fairtaxers know that in competitive markets when costs are removed market forces take over and force price drops if market shares are to be maintained.
Lewis if the income tax system imposes costs, other than the taxes themselves, and the income tax system is removed those costs are removed as well.You don't understand what a "cost" is to an economist. It's not money spent. To an economist, you reading this email has a "cost."
I strongly suspect that I understand a great deal more that YOU think and yes, your reading this definately does have a cost attached.
I'm sorry, but none of those is a refutation of Dr. Paynes work IMHO.
No they are not. They are price markups. Compliance costs were not mentioned or considered. It is assumed that because the inputs are cheaper, that stage of production can reduce their markups more. But those markups are simply the profit. I know this will not sink in no matter how many times it is explained.
Quoting from Study #1:
In the end ADL used simplified versions in which each component of the burden is presumed to depend upon at most two of three tax form variables: the number of lines on the form, the number of line items in the form instructions to the Internal Revenue Code and Regulations, and the number of attachments requested that are IRS forms. The resulting model generated an estimated compliance burden of 2.7 billion hours for businesses in 1983 a number five times higher than the aggregate estimated from the survey results 546.7 million hours. The ADL study did not attempt to translate the estimates of time spent on tax compliance into dollar values. Slemrod (1996) argues that the shortcomings of the ADL model make its compliance cost estimates (and those of other researchers who have based their estimates on the ADL model) unreliable. Payne (1993) used the ADL model to estimate the number of hours devoted to compliance 3.614 billion in 1985
So what it seems to be saying is the ADL overstated hours by 500% and then Payne extrapulated those numbers higher to get his. To me if someone thinks your numbers are 5 times too high, they are refuting it. But fairtaxers know different, I guess.
"Then you haven't looked."
And presumable have and offer 3 "refutations"??? Let's look at them in reverse order since that's how I happened to look at them.
"three" - A presentation to Ways & Means Committee of William Gale of Brookings Institute. Perhaps you haven't noticed (but others have) that Mr. Gale's handiwork shows up repeatedly throughout the heated opposition by status quo forces to tax reform such as the FairTax. He is a staunch status quo defender and if he's not personally on these threads, his views and disciples certainly are and his effect upon the Tax Panel report has been noted before.
In this notorious presentation at one point he opines that the FairTax (NRST) rate would HAVE TO be 94% tax exclusive. This is more than just a bit silly and it's surprising to see it in what should be a well-reasoned and scholarly effort ... which it is not. Also we note that Joel Slemrod (one of the authors of your link "one" is a Gale/Brookings colleague by reading one of the footnotes:
"Slemrod, Joel. 1996. Which is the Simplest Tax System of Them All? In Economic Effects Fundamental Tax Reform, edited by Henry J. Aaron and William G. Gale. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 335-391."
Indeed it seems that the fruit doesn't fall far from the tree - or in this case a left-leaning liberal think tank. We also note that within this paper (refuted some time ago by material on the AFFT website) that Mr. Gale plays his famous "reduce the base by casting out and ignoring part of it" as with respect to Payne's work he says something to the effect that Payne's numbers come up with $514 billion of which $236 billion cannot be included since it covers costs which "aren't typically included" in compliance costs. So Mr. Gale summarily casts out about half of the figure to end up with $277 billion - a trick which he (and the Tax Panel) have repeatedly done in attempting to attack the FairTax. A nice trick if you can get away with it. There are other flaws in his supposed "rebuttal" (or whatever you'd like to call it).
"two" - A link to Amazon to allow one to buy yet another book which Mr. Gale is involved with. It's a paperback but still awfully expensive and it's clear to me that "The FairTax Book" is a much better buy and offers more in the way of real information IAE.
"one" - Oh, my! A paper by Joel Slemrod from Michigan U. Hmmm! - Slemrod - Slemrod - where have we seen that name recently ... I know; in "three" of this post. The Slemrod paper, however, seems to be about tax compliance in medium to large businesses. Are we to assume that this applies to small businesses and individuals, too? IOW the "refutation" seems to be about something different from the Payne presentation.
So we find that none of the three links you give are at all workmanlike or make a convincing case. I think it best just to stick with Payne's information and observations - all of it and not just the half of it slashed off by Mr. Gale.
I'm sorry, but none of those is a refutation of Dr. Paynes work IMHO.Shocking!
"three" - A presentation to Ways & Means Committee of William Gale of Brookings Institute. Perhaps you haven't noticed (but others have) that Mr. Gale's handiwork shows up repeatedly throughout the heated opposition by status quo forces to tax reform such as the FairTax. He is a staunch status quo defender and if he's not personally on these threads, his views and disciples certainly are and his effect upon the Tax Panel report has been noted before.So you can't address what he actually said? Frankly, in the economic world, Gale is respected - Payne isn't even in the economic world.
Also we note that Joel Slemrod (one of the authors of your link "one" is a Gale/Brookings colleague by reading one of the footnotAre you going for the record for logical fallacies in one post? Joel Slemrod is an extremely respected economist. Why don't you address what he said instead of trying the "guilt by association" crap (oh, right, because that's all you got).
So what it seems to be saying is the ADL overstated hours by 500% and then Payne extrapulated those numbers higher to get his. To me if someone thinks your numbers are 5 times too high, they are refuting it. But fairtaxers know different, I guess.And then he took those hours and multiplied them by the average wage of "IRS employees and that of employees at Arthur Andersen, Inc.," or $28.31. And those are 1985 dollars!!
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