Are you claiming the brilliant economist Steve Moore (Cato, Club for Growth, etc etc) worked for John Connally and Romney?
The author of this supposed informative article.
Other econs are not quite as enamored. a little reality always helps.
The fact that proposals for flat taxes seem to be back in vogue. Take Republican presidential candidate Herman Cains 999 Plan. A reporter called me about it, which was the only reason I went to the Cain website to check it out for a few seconds, which was all it took to get what his proposal is basically about: (i) switching to a consumption-based tax system that exempts income from capitalwhich on its own is regressive; (ii) switching to a single (flat) marginal tax rate schedulewhich on its own is (also) regressive; and then (iii) switching to a not-just-double-but-triple tax of consumed income (instead of saved income) through the 9 percent business tax (exempting capital income) and the 9 percent sales tax (which naturally exempts savings) that are layered on top of the 9 percent income tax (which exempts capital income as well)which means all that regressivity I already listed is tripled! Where did the 9 percent rates come from, I was asked by the reporterand would it be revenue neutral? My response: probably because 9 is one digit long and theoretically, yes, its possible that a triple tax on consumed income with no or few exemptions which has an effective rate of 9+9+9 or 27 percent could indeed be revenue neutral. (From Cains description of the 999 base, its not clear what is exempt other than charitable deductionsoh, and all of capital income, of course.)
I dont know if Ill feel compelled to say anymore about the Cain tax plan unless the candidate actually seems to have a decent chance of getting the Republican nomination, but on the way to seeing if that happens I hope people recognize how insane his tax plan is (without needing any detailed analysis). This is one plan where my biggest reaction to the plan is not that it doesnt raise enough revenue. Like I said, theoretically it could, but why would we ever want to do it that way?
http://www.csmonitor.com/Business/Economist-Mom/2011/0929/Cain-s-999-plan-Not-sane-tax-policy