Posted on 08/01/2004 6:08:53 PM PDT by NeoCaveman
A domestic centerpiece of the Bush/GOP agenda for a second Bush term is getting rid of the Internal Revenue Service, the DRUDGE REPORT has learned.
The Speaker of the House will push for replacing the nation's current tax system with a national sales tax or a value added tax, Hill sources tell DRUDGE.
"People ask me if Im really calling for the elimination of the IRS, and I say I think thats a great thing to do for future generations of Americans," Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert explains in his new book, to be released on Wednesday.
"Pushing reform legislation will be difficult. Change of any sort seldom comes easy. But these changes are critical to our economic vitality and our economic security abroad," Hastert declares in SPEAKER: LESSONS FROM FORTY YEARS IN COACHING AND POLITICS.
"If you own property, stock, or, say, one hundred acres of farmland and tax time is approaching, you dont want to make a mistake, so youre almost obliged to go to a certified public accountant, tax preparer, or tax attorney to help you file a correct return. That costs a lot of money. Now multiply the amount you have to pay by the total number of people who are in the same boat. You cant. No one can because precise numbers dont exist. But we can stipulate that were talking about a huge amount. Now consider that a flat tax, national sales tax, or VAT would not only eliminate the need to do this, it could also eliminate the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) itself and make the process of paying taxes much easier."
"By adopting a VAT, sales tax, or some other alternative, we could begin to change productivity. If you can do that, you can change gross national product and start growing the economy. You could double the economy over the next fifteen years. All of a sudden, the problem of what future generations owe in Social Security and Medicare wont be so daunting anymore. The answer is to grow the economy, and the key to doing that is making sure we have a tax system that attracts capital and builds incentives to keep it here instead of forcing it out to other nations."
That's how most trips are planned.
First you decide where you want to go, then you plan the route.
To restore privacy, liberty and prosperity to all, and to establish a fair and noninvasive system of taxation, the best minds in the country have arrived at this map.
No one else has come up with anything that even comes close.
Ok, anyone reading the thread can see you're twisting the context. Back to ignore with you.So instead of address what I post you just say I'm "twisting the context" and say you're gonna ignore me. Is that how you handle people who question your logic?
"....the NRST shills..."
"... and they quickly discredit themselves with beligerant name-calling...."
Let me see if I have this right. In the very same post, you refer to FairTax supporters as "NRST shills" and then criticize them for name-calling?
No wonder we have been going around in circles with you and LewisLynn/balrog666/YourNightmare, etc., etc., etc. for years now.
You probably don't even comprehend the contradiction in that post.
Which only includes accounting and paperwork costs, and does not include litgation, tax research, planning, legalfees, fines, loss of productivity ...
American General Contractor's Association
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I guess you missed my questions....you said you knew how much you paid in payroll and income taxes, how about the percentage rate? and how much in hidden corporate taxes on your purchases and services?
State & local sales tax 7.75 percent, pretty visible to me....what rate did you pay in income tax? corporate hidden taxes? payroll taxes?
Businesses must charge enough for a product to cover both their total cost of production and their expected profit. The Cost of Goods Sold for a business has to include the cost of labor involved. The cost of labor includes the taxes on that labor (28% or 34% of those taxes being Federal Income Tax).
This is how the Income Taxes are "hidden". They are hidden in the cost of labor required for every stage of production, transportation, and sale of a product.
Thanks for your informative reply.
Also any google search on total individual and corporate taxes will turn up the government's own accounting such as:
http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:svpUXRx9pcYJ:www.house.gov/jct/x-83-99.pdf+total+federal+corporate+income+tax&hl=en
The last year listed over a trillion $$$ in individual and corporate tax receipts. The link also breaks it down into individual tax receiptes of $879 billion and corporate tax receipts of $184 billion.
Some of the detractors in this thread think individual tax receipts are not included in product pricing. The last time I checked, employers were required to withhold payroll tax and give it over to the government on a quarterly basis.
But this payroll tax withholding is paid in the form of gross pay by the employer to the employee. So the employing company still needs to account for it in the pricing of their products.
Suppose that the income tax were to be abolished. Say the employer reaches a deal with employees, that is, one half of former payroll withholding will then go to the employee's pay and one half to the company for new competitive pricing purposes.
Would you expect as a result for US business to be more competitive with the NRST?
You nailed it. It's pretty clear isn't it?
Would you say that anyone who refuses to acknowledge your post given that they have the ability to understand it, would you say such a person has an agenda?
This is how the Income Taxes are "hidden". They are hidden in the cost of labor required for every stage of production, transportation, and sale of a product.So what you are saying is that I don't pay income taxes on my earnings?
The cost of labor includes the taxes on that labor (28% or 34% of those taxes being Federal Income Tax).I'm curious, what do you think the median citizen's effective total federal tax burden is?
The ONLY way to get the scum of society--the pimps, whores, fraudulent businesses, drug dealers, etc.-- to pay their fair share is by a national sales tax.
Any "flat tax" will eventually be raised to a high tax rate.
It is a shame on this nation's history that a national sales tax is not the method of collecting federal taxes.
I spend 10 months out of a 12 month year figuring out cost basis and other BS just to file a tax return.
The total amount spent on federal tax compliance is about 13 percent of the total HP Corporate Tax Department budget. It is interesting to note that HPs total costs of local (U.S.) sales and use tax compliance exceed its federal income tax compliance costs.
So corporate and individual tax compliance was $225 billion + 279 billion, or $507 billion. A little off of your $800 billion number just for corporate compliance, isn't it?
That was just one small sample of what you have chosen to overlook, however, Payne's 65 cents per tax dollar collected calculates a much higher value than $800billion in 2000,
The Flat Tax; Hall & Rabushka, '95:
What the Income Tax Cost the American People
Notes & References:
A comprehensive review of all the studies that attempt to measure the costs associated with the federal income tax appears in James L. Payne, Costly Returns: The Burdens of the U.S. Tax System (San Francisco: Institute for Contemporary Studies Press, 1993). Payne summarizes the estimates of compliance costs that appear in the following studies: Joel Slemrod and Nikki Sorum, "The Compliance Cost of the U.S. Individual Income Tax System," National Tax Journal 37 (December 1984): 46265; Arthur D. Little, Inc., Development of Methodology for Estimating the Taxpayer Paperwork Burden (Washington, D.C.: Internal Revenue Service, 1988), pp. III23; James T. Iocozzia and Garrick R. Shear, "Trends in Taxpayer Paperwork Burden," in Internal Revenue Service, Trend Analyses and Related Statistics, 1989 Update (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1989), p. 56; Annual Reports of the commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service; and a variety of other IRS memoranda
As the response here demonstrated:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1160242/posts?page=497#497
State & local sales tax 7.75 percent, pretty visible to meIf it was 7.75% and pretty visible, you should be able to tell me how much you gave your state government last year in sales taxes.
13 percent of the total HP Corporate Tax Department budget.
Sorry, but a department budget does not include the total costs of loss to business, lobbying that bear upon impact of the income/payroll tax sytem on a business as a whole.
I suggest you get a hold of James L. Payne, Costly Returns: The Burdens of the U.S. Tax System (San Francisco: Institute for Contemporary Studies Press, 1993).
Payne summarizes the estimates of compliance costs that appear in the following studies: Joel Slemrod and Nikki Sorum, "The Compliance Cost of the U.S. Individual Income Tax System," National Tax Journal 37 (December 1984): 46265; Arthur D. Little, Inc., Development of Methodology for Estimating the Taxpayer Paperwork Burden (Washington, D.C.: Internal Revenue Service, 1988), pp. III23; James T. Iocozzia and Garrick R. Shear, "Trends in Taxpayer Paperwork Burden," in Internal Revenue Service, Trend Analyses and Related Statistics, 1989 Update (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1989), p. 56; Annual Reports of the commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service; and a variety of other IRS memoranda.
The total amount spent on federal tax compliance is about 13 percent of the total HP Corporate Tax Department budget. It is interesting to note that HPs total costs of local (U.S.) sales and use tax compliance exceed its federal income tax compliance costs.
that study only goes to the time used to fill out an 1120...
There's no contradiction if you truthfully call a spade "a spade".
Caesar taxes and all the people look for either protection or leverage, or both.
There are going to be people arguing for the status quo, and for a variety of reasons. There are going to be people arguing for several different alternative taxing methods.
The Income Tax has been an oppressive method, and has resulted in massive corruption in our body politic and businesses. It is past time to rid ourselves of this "slave tax".
With global trade increasing as it is, we cannot survive as a nation if we keep taxing our production (which is what the Income Tax does), while our foreign competitors dump their products into our markets comparatively tax-free, and our service jobs are lost to countries with lower labor costs.
There are more prohibitive measures in our tax code against hiring American workers than just the cost of tax compliance. The whole tax code must go! There may be a lot of fur flying, but I see that as a good thing.
Make the people who favor a tax on your labor, on your sweat, on the minutes and hours of your life, -- make them explain why they favor that.
Caesar taxes and all the people look for either protection or leverage, or both.
There are going to be people arguing for the status quo, and for a variety of reasons. There are going to be people arguing for several different alternative taxing methods.
The Income Tax has been an oppressive method, and has resulted in massive corruption in our body politic and businesses. It is past time to rid ourselves of this "slave tax".
With global trade increasing as it is, we cannot survive as a nation if we keep taxing our production (which is what the Income Tax does), while our foreign competitors dump their products into our markets comparatively tax-free, and our service jobs are lost to countries with lower labor costs.
There are more prohibitive measures in our tax code against hiring American workers than just the cost of tax compliance. The whole tax code must go! There may be a lot of fur flying, but I see that as a good thing.
Make the people who favor a tax on your labor, on your sweat, on the minutes and hours of your life, -- make them explain why they favor that.
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