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To: Meet the New Boss
The 9-9-9 plan moves part of the tax burden onto the sale of goods by foreign businesses and would dramatically re-orient the incentives in our economy back in favor of capital-intensive domestic manufacturing jobs and in favor of saving and investment.

How does this happen exactly? Please explain.

Is Cain suggesting that all of America is now an 'economic development zone', or does that just apply to inner-city ghettos?

Personally, I think you are being a little optimistic in your economic assessment.

153 posted on 10/19/2011 7:13:21 PM PDT by beancounter13
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To: beancounter13
How does this happen exactly? Please explain.

By moving some of tax that we now collect from a corporate income tax and instead collecting that in the form of a tax on the sale of goods, it shifts the tax burden from only domestic businesses to be shared by both domestic and foreign businesses.

Let's say for purposes of example that today the government raises $20 from corporate income tax on domestic television manufacturers (and pretending for purposes of example that we still make those products).

And now let's shift half of the burden onto a sales tax on the sale of the televisions themselves to consumers.

In the new scenario, the government only collects $10 from the corporate income tax from the US manufacturer instead of $20 as before. This means the US manufacturer has more flexibility to lower its prices and still make a profit.

Assuming the domestic manufacturer sells one television and the foreign manufacturer sells one television, the $10 that was shifted over onto the sales tax is charged $5 on the television sold by the domestic manufacturer and $5 on the television sold by the foreign manufacturer.

The consumer is only concerned with the after-tax price. The foreign manufacturer today has a number of advantages in labor, environmental, currency manipulation, and so forth.

The Cain tax plan helps to level the field by allowing a US manufacturer to be able to compete at lower prices and placing a tax burden at the point of sale on goods by both domestic and foreign manufacturing.

Who knows, under this plan we might even see television manufacturing begin again in the US if we combine the tax plan together with lifting regulatory burdens.

155 posted on 10/19/2011 7:27:03 PM PDT by Meet the New Boss
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