Posted on 12/18/2005 4:46:00 PM PST by FairOpinion
YES! 83% (8832 votes) A consumption tax would be great for the American economy. Do away with complicated income taxes!
NO! 17% (1761) A consumption tax would not be fair for low-income households. Keep the current income tax system!
We'll send your vote to your congressional representative and senators.
"Your scheme would also create an entire industry of 'phony' corporations which would purchase consumption items 'wholesale' to avoid paying the taxes."
Under the FairTax, items purchased for personal consumption would be taxed, even if paid for by a corporation. That is to avoid the type of fraud you are concerned about.
"Trust me. The politicians will win."
I discussed the importance of abolishing the income tax because of its tendency to form a habit of servility in the souls of a people that accept it. Servility of soul is bad not only in itself, it is also an open door through which will soon walk the abuses of ambitious government power. Leaders who find themselves with governmental power over a servile people will be quick to conclude that such a people exist to serve them.
Alan Keyes The Power of the Purse, WorldNet Daily, August 27,1999
Neither version asks the proper question:
1) Would you prefer to pay $30,000 out of your $60,000 take home pay for your new Toyota AND PAY YOUR CURRENT MARGINAL FEDERAL TAX RATE OF APX. 13% (ed note: my guess)? 2%
or
2) Would you prefer to pay $39,000 out of your new $90,000 take home pay for your new Toyota AND PAY NO FEDERAL INCOME TAX? 98%
"My point is not this specific example alone. My point is that society has reasons to stimulate an ownership society, and helping people get to that status benefits society, without the Fair Tax aspect of being totally neutral."
Good point. There is no public policy initiative that I can think of that would be more consistent with an "ownership society" than one which eliminates the federal government's first claim on your wages.
"Currently, a family of four with a gross income of $40,000/year and taking only the standard deductions and exemptions pays exactly $0 in Federal Income Taxes."
Most families at the low end of the income scale pay more in FICA and other payroll taxes than they do in income taxes.
"Under the 'Fair Tax' plan, given that they 'consume' their entire earnings the family would see the cost of their purchases rise from 40,000 to $49,200."
Not if a substantial amount of their consumption consisted of US produced goods.
"In exchange for what? The five or six hours that they now spend filling out a 1040?"
Well, for starters
1. Freedom from having their incomes confiscated and the tyranny of the IRS
2. a stronger, faster growing economy with more good job opportunites
3. greater visibility of the tax burden to all Americans, which will exert downward pressure on tax rates and govt spending
"I don't get it."
Several of us on this thread have noticed that.
"The problem with the 'fairer' flat tax is that .....it, like EVERY tax always does, can go up. By the time you add up what you're paying in local and state taxes, you'd eventually be back to square one re: paying 50% or more of your income in taxes."
"It is a signal advantage of taxes on articles of consumption, that they contain in their own nature a security against excess. They prescribe their own limit; which cannot be exceeded without defeating the end proposed, that is, an extension of the revenue. When applied to this object, the saying is as just as it is witty, that, 'in political arithmetic, two and two do not always make four.' If duties are too high, they lessen the consumption; the collection is eluded; and the product to the treasury is not so great as when they are confined within proper and moderate bounds. This forms a complete barrier against any material oppression of the citizens by taxes of this class, and is itself a natural limitation of the power of imposing them."
Alexander Hamilton in Federalist #21
"You go to your friends store and he rings up a $100 item for $25. You pay tax on the lesser amount. How is that easier to police?"
Two scenarios:
1. The store only takes in $25, in essence giving the customer a 75% discount. I think we can all agree that that just isn't going to happen on any significant basis. Businesses aren't going to forego 75% of their revenues to aid their customers in avoiding the sales tax.
2. The store takes in the entire $100, but only attributes $25 to the sale. Where did the other $75 come from? Manna from heaven? Gift income? How many businesses get 75% of their revenues from gifts? Think that might be a bit suspicious when they are audited?
Do you have any substantive concerns about the FairTax?
Open note to those who took this poll: What would your answer be to this question: "Attempt to replace the income tax system with a national sales tax but fail to kill the income tax and end up with both?"
"In my example above, what price would the Feds see?....$25. And the tax on the $25 will be calculated correctly. The Feds will go on their way fat, dumb and happy, not knowing that they were cheated."
Have you ever heard of double entry bookkeeping? Are you aware that a set of books must balance? You DO understand that that $75 in cash will have to have an offsetting entry somewhere on the company's financials, right?
You are paranoid, friend.
With all that said, it's still interesting that such overwhelming majority would vote yes on this question.It's not surprising an overwhelming majority would vote yes. Aside from people wanting to take the easiest route, it's also because most everyone understands what a state sales tax is, how it works and it's usually a low rate ...which is nothing like a federal sales tax beginning with lying about the "sales tax rate" itself.
Ask the same "overwhelming majority" if they also favor sales taxes on all their internet purchases.
By the way thanks for the link to FairTax.org. I didn't (couldn't) read it all, but it looks like a comprehensive site.
My ultimate fear still is having the so called "Fair Tax" pass and the repeal of the IT (which the site says would be on a parallel path) to fail. Thus we'd be stuck with both. Try getting rid of either one of them in that case. HAH!! Good Luck. Even if the cards fall right, some Liberal Congress will cook up some emergency to make enough dimwits believe we need the IT again "temporarily." We see how "temporary" it was this time, 80 years later.
A penny or two?...no try 23 pennys per dollar. That makes your real tax rate around 30% assuming you have a state sales tax.Wrong again.
(b) Rate-
`(1) FOR 2007- In the calendar year 2007, the rate of tax is 23 percent of the gross payments for the taxable property or service.Try 30 pennys on the "gross payment" including the state sales tax.
$1.00 + 7% state = $1.07 plus 30% federal = $1.39 (gross payment)
That makes your real sales tax rate around 39%
.23 X (of) $1.39 (gross payment) = $0.32 (or 32% federal "sales" tax)
I doubt VERY much it would take 23 cents on the dollar to equal what the feds presently rake in through the income tax.First of all it's not 23 cents ON the dollar it's 30 cents ON the dollar and you're right, it SHOULDN'T, but the Fairtax group for one think everyone should get a government check based on the size of your "qualified family". Those checks would be mailed out every month BEFORE and even if you DID NOT PAY ANY SALES TAXES which, using their own graph creates even more people collecting government funds with out contributing a dime....Hence the 30% tax.
I doubt VERY much it would take 23 cents on the dollar to equal what the feds presently rake in through the income tax.You are correct. It would not take a 23% FairTax rate to replace the income tax.
Nice try but you're a fraud. She didn't say "23% Fairtax". You know she assumed the obvious and you should have corrrected here. Of course when you're trying to cover up the truth why would you?
23 cents ON THE DOLLAR is not the same as a 23% Fairtax rate, You know it and you're lying through your teeth to cover it up.
30 percent. This issue is often confusing, so we explain more here.
My $60,000 number and $90,000 figures were intended to show the difference in take home pay -- the former including income and payroll taxes, and the latter no income or payroll taxes.
In other words, starting with a $90,000 gross income in both cases, under the current system a single person might take home $60,000 and then have to go buy the Toyota. So your taking away an extra 13% is superfluous.
If arguing for the FairTax, inflating the numbers causes skeptics to assume all your numbers are wrong. So it is best to keep numbers accurate and conservative.
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