Posted on 04/22/2006 5:39:00 AM PDT by Eaglewatcher
EDMOND How much of your time and money did you spend getting your taxes filed this year? Your time is worth something even if you use a software program to do your taxes. Your time is worth something gathering up all the information to give to your hired tax preparer.
Multiply that by the number of taxpayers and corporate taxpayers and you can plainly see how much a burden our current tax code is on the taxpayers of America. You can get mad, just like I do each middle of April, but the inevitable has to occur. Did you know that a portion of our tax money goes to pay the salary of some 113,000 IRS employees? What a large number of employees. Yet, it probably takes that many employees to administer the thousands of pages of tax code.
A 2001 press release from Sen. Chuck Grassley indicated that 51 percent of the hours IRS employees spent on the Internet were for personal usage; some 47 percent of the e-mails sent to the IRS were personal; that 25 percent of taxpayers calls to the IRS went unanswered; during the 2001 filing season, an Inspector General employee made contacts at walk-in assistance sites and seven times they were denied service, got incorrect answers 49 percent of the time and insufficient answers 24 percent of the time. Calling the toll-free assistance line found no one could be reached 37 percent of the time and did not receive the requested service 47 percent of the time. Finally, it was determined that in fiscal year 2000, the IRS spent $1.3 billion for contractors to the IRS. While that is an older release, it is clear taxpayers are not getting what they are paying for. The IRS is a failure by any measure.
All this caused me to seek a better method of delivering my money for the federal government to use. Obviously, the current method eats up too many resources that could be better used by our government. I found there has been a bill filed by Rep. John Linder as H.R. 25 (see his Web site http://linder.house.gov).
Heres a brief overview of The Fair Tax Act: 1. Repeals all corporate and individual income taxes, payroll taxes, self-employment taxes, capital gains taxes, estate taxes and gift taxes. 2. Imposes a revenue-neutral personal consumption tax on all new goods and services at the point of final purchase. Business-to-business transactions and used products, which have already been taxed, are not subject to the sales tax. 3. Rebates the sales tax on all spending up to the poverty level.
Results of the FairTax: Dramatically reduce the costs of goods and services by 20 to 30 percent. Allows you to keep 100 percent of your paycheck, pension and Social Security payments. Gross Domestic Product will increase by almost 10.5 percent in the first year after enactment. Compliance costs would decrease by 90 percent. Real investment would initially increase by 76 percent relative to the investment that would be made under present law.
While this increase would gradually decline, it remains 15 percent higher than under the existing tax structure. Exports would increase by 26 percent initially and would remain more than 13 percent above the level under the current tax system. Real wages will increase. Increases incentives to work by as much as 20 percent in many households, leading to higher economic growth and efficiency. Interest rates will fall 25 to 35 percent. This is a much better choice than our current method. Any change has to be better than we have now. Since lobbyists have been partially responsible for the convoluted tax code we now have, getting this passed may be a challenge. It seems to me that taxation based on spending is more fair than any other method. If you dont spend, you dont pay.
Take a look at the Fair Tax Web site for answers to all your questions, http://www.fairtax.org/. I found many articles about how the tax would work in detail, and how this tax proposal handles families at or below the poverty level. It appears about every question or issue is addressed in the Fair Tax legislation. Being responsible to properly fill out several pages of forms just plain stinks.
In todays world, we need and deserve a better method, a more efficient method. Gains in efficiency alone will be a great benefit. Eliminating paperwork, employees and delivering that money to the federal coffers more efficiently is an idea that is over due. We must eliminate the IRS as we know it today. We are too modern an economy and people to continue to be burdened by antiquated tax methods that favor some and not others. We need fairness in our taxation. The FairTax is that method.
A final point is made by Yahoo News: Sen. Ron, D-Ore., did not prepare his real tax returns, but he was able to prepare a hypothetical tax return in 30 minutes based on his proposed simplified tax system. This last fact is truly revolutionary because no one can remember the last time a member of the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee actually completed their own tax return. Need I say more?
Just as people marched over pending immigration law, if we marched over taxation, we can assure a change will occur. Our politicians need a loud roar from the taxed to change what is being done. When you have a method of taxation that makes you pay a penalty for paying too little or too much, you know something has to be done. Everyone should pay their fair share. But that share should not be wasted on bureaucracy and paperwork. Let your representatives in Washington know how you feel. If you dont, we will be filling out the same pages of forms this time next year. Remember, it is up to us to see that they get it right.
(Bob OBar can be contacted at rto4nmm@sbcglobal.net.)
bookmark your post (From Federalist No. 62:)
You're assumiong that once those hundreds of billions of corporate income taxes are removed, all the savings will be passed on to the consumer.
You're a gullible guy, aren't you?
Too easy and too many problems solved that way.
Yeah! I guess so given that I believe that competitive markets work and have done so throughout recorded history!
Well, actually, robert, some good bit of those savings WILL be passed on the taxpayers - and they certainly aren't now!!
If anyone would like to be added to this ping list let me know.
John Linder in the House(HR25) & Saxby Chambliss Senate(S25) offer a comprehensive bill to kill all income and SS/Medicare payroll taxes outright and replace them with with a national retail sales tax administered by the states.
H.R.25,S.25
A bill to promote freedom, fairness, and economic opportunity by repealing the income tax and other taxes, abolishing the Internal Revenue Service, and enacting a national retail sales tax to be administered primarily by the States.Refer for additional information:
Are you from Edmond?
That good eh?
Of course 100% of the savings aren't going to be passed on- only as much as the competitive market will force the business to give up. Which is probably going to be, say, 90 to 95% in most industries.
If the government just butts out of the process entirely, the true market value of a given item will emerge before very long. Some items will turn out to be higher than what we're paying now, and some less- since large segments of our economy are structured to insulate and shelter wealth from the IRS. (Mortgage interest deductions, for example, will be a non-factor, since mortgage interest is 100% untaxed under the FairTax.)
Well, if they're competing with imports, where's the competitive push? Foreign manufacturers don't pay corporate income taxes so they have none to apply.
Domestic manufacturers can maintain their price and be as competitive as they are today. Why should they lower their prices 15%?
What a bunch of baloney.
"If the government just butts out of the process entirely, the true market value of a given item will emerge before very long."
Oh really? When you're taxing a new product at 30% but a used product is tax free, supply and demand will artificially raise the price on the used item beyond what it's really worth.
Currently, if my company buys something for resale, my company pays no tax. If my company buys capital equipment, it's tax deductible. So there's no "business-to-business" tax today.
I think you mean that my suppliers will charge me less for their products which means I can charge less to my customer. As I stated before, I don't believe it for a minute.
You really don't understand how things work. Read post #19 again - and more slowly.
Market forces work on foreign goods too - and on new vs. used things, too. And you also need to understand that US goods will have the costs of the income tax removed from their prices making them more attractive overseas.
Believe it or not as you like, but you're paying for the taxes that your supplier sends to the Feds even though you make not cut a check to the government.
That income tax money has to come from someplace ... or perhaps you think it grows on trees???
Oh screw you. Just about everything I buy says "Made in China". And if every imported DVD player goes up 15%, where I go to buy a cheaper domestic one? That and thousands of other products that are no longer "Made in the USA".
So don't give me any of your crap about "competitive pressures" and "market forces". Get your head out of your theoretical, classroom a$$ and into the real world.
"And you also need to understand that US goods will have the costs of the income tax removed from their prices making them more attractive overseas."
Oh, goody goody for the foreigners. I happen to live here, not overseas.
Oh, and when our (very few) domestic manufacturers are undercutting foreign imports by 15%, you can then expect their governments to retaliate with a 15% import tariff on ours. Oops. There went our "attractive" price.
Believe it or not as you like, but you're paying for the taxes that your supplier sends to the Feds even though you make not cut a check to the government.But it's a lot less than the Fairtax, you said so yourself out of the otherside of your mouth.That income tax money has to come from someplace ... or perhaps you think it grows on trees???
"The amount of taxes collected from the higher prices under the embedded taxes of the present system are actually quite small. I gave an example of a $100 purchase that ended up with (very generously) a $3.75 tax revenue amount which, under the FairTax, would have been $23.00
It's built into the products I buy. But you're assuming that my supplier will lower his price to me if he no longer pays income tax. I say he won't. I know he won't if he's competing for my business with a foreign supplier.
No increase other than the 30% Fair Tax added to the cost of every import.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.