Posted on 10/31/2002 9:02:13 AM PST by Tumbleweed_Connection
In the heart of the Treasury Department, their work deeply under wraps, tax-policy experts are hatching policy options for what could be the Bush economic team's first big idea: shifting the U.S. tax system away from taxing income, toward taxing consumption.
But taking what has long been an academic ideal and translating it into real-world tax policy would take a dramatic commitment of presidential leadership, a long education and political campaign, and a bipartisan convergence of political interests, tax-policy experts say. Few of them are holding their breath.
"It's true that you can write down a simpler tax system on paper than the one we have," said William G. Gale, a tax expert at the Brookings Institution and a critic of consumption-tax proposals. "But it's not necessarily true that you could get that tax system through the legislative system, or ensure it would stay that way once you did."
Officially, a year-long tax policy project at Treasury will merely present President Bush with tax-reform options, probably early next year. But economists and tax lobbyists close to the effort believe that Treasury Secretary Paul H. O'Neill is serious about elevating tax reform on Washington's agenda. If Congress is not prepared to act yet, at least the issue could underpin Bush's reelection campaign, they say...
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
I base my belief that revenue neutrality exists on the following results from a 1995 Cato Institute(libertarian) Policy Analysis:
Table 2
Tax Revenues to Be Replaced by National Sales Tax, 1995 (billions of dollars)
Income tax $759.9 Estate and gift taxes 15.1 Excise taxes (estimated) 28.0 Subtotal 803.0 Payroll taxes 490.3 Total $1,293.3 Source: Federal Receipts,
Analytical Perspectives,
FY 1997 Budget of the United States Government.
Calendar year basis.
Table 3
Calculation of National Sales Tax Rate
Tax Base
(billions)Revenues to
Be Collected
(billions)Tax Rate
(tax exclusive)Tax Rate
(tax inclusive)No rebate, excluding payroll taxes $5,978.2 $ 803.0 13.4% 11.8% With rebate, excluding payroll taxes 4,841.1 803.0 16.6 14.2 No rebate, including payroll taxes 5,978.2 1,293.2 21.6 17.8 With rebate, including payroll taxes 4,841.1 1,293.2 26.7 21.1 Source: National Income Product Accounts, Survey of Current Business, August 1996;
Federal Receipts, Analytical Perspectives,
FY 1997 Budget of the United States Government.
The 23% tax inclusive rate [HR 2525] would offset any losses from tax avoidance beyond the amount that occurs with the current income tax.
Remember that before and tax measure can actually be enacted, it must meet the revenue neutrality requirements under CBO review. If rates in a revenue bill don't meet the revenue neutrality specification, the bill cannot get enacted into law without the complicity of both democrats and republicans. It only takes one House member or one Senator to challenge a bill for lack revenue neutrality and kill it right then and there. That is why Congress finds it so difficult to pass even the smallest of tax cuts.
Table 1
Tax Base for National Sales Tax (billions of dollars)
Description of Taxable Item Tax Base (1995) Personal consumption expenditures $4,924.9 Purchases of new homes 156.4 Improvements to single-family homes 73.9 Imputed rent on housing -534.3 Additional financial intermediation services 53.0 Foreign travel by U.S. residents (one-half) -26.4 Expenditures abroad by U.S. residents -2.7 Food produced and consumed on farms -0.4 State and local government consumption 682.6 State and local government gross purchases 159.1 Federal government consumption 453.8 Federal government gross purchases 62.7 Less: Education expenditures -97.5 Plus: Expenditures in U.S. by nonresidents 73.1 NST Base $5,978.2 Source: National Income Product Accounts,
Survey of Current Business, August 1996.
Total personal expenditure includes the FCA that is payed to each person in the household.
Therefore to calculate the total tax receipts under the NRST you must add FCA cash flow into the income amount for each quintile. The FCA is received by the citizen before it is expended on consumption and returned to the treasury each month within the total tax receipts.
The net effect is for the NRST to collect an apparent higher monthly tax take accuing to total tax receipts, though the FCA is really only a round robin cash flow.
Thus Total Tax receipts under the NRST are #families * (income + FCA) * 0.23. With each month's FCA returned to the treasury for payout to the following month.
The distribution is calculated from income without the FCA addition (since FCA is a cash payment from government provided to offset quintile tax payments and not counted as income to the family per-se though it is included in expenditure to calculate total tax received).
The net federal tax retained for the federal budget then
Equals (#all_families) * avg_income * 0.23
NOT (#all_families) * avg_income * 0.23 - FCA.
You appear to be calculating the latter as the net total tax and not the former.
It is time to throw the class warfare label on the ash heap of history, where it rightfully belongs.
Okay, I can see that. Also I used your figure of $5352 for a family of 4. However, with 118.6 families, the avg family size is obviously smaller than 4 and the average FCA must also be smaller. Where can I go to figure out what the FICA is for different family sizes?
Where can I go to figure out what the FICA is for different family sizes?
Actually the "family size" criteria is really household data. Thus adults and or children in a household, married, related or not , constitute a "family" for purposes of the FCA. family is actually a misnomer.
You must not be reading my replies, I posted the table for your earlier in reply #178, but here it is again:
All legal residents will receive a FCA equivalent to the FairTax paid on essential goods and services. The FCA will be paid in advance, in equal installments each month. The size of the monthly FCA will be determined by the government's Poverty Level for a particular family size, multiplied by the tax rate.
Every year, the Department of Health and Human Services [HHS] determine the "poverty level" for each family size.
The 2001 "FairTax" Family Consumption Allowance Figures |
|||
Family Size |
HHS Poverty Level |
Annual FCA |
Monthly FCA |
One |
$8,590 |
$1,976 |
$165 |
Two |
$17,180 |
$3,951 |
$329 |
Three |
$20,200 |
$4,646 |
$387 |
Four |
$23,220 |
$5,341 |
$445 |
Five |
$26,240 |
$6,035 |
$503 |
Six |
$29,260 |
$6,730 |
$561 |
Seven |
$32,280 |
$7,424 |
$619 |
Eight |
$35,300 |
$8,119 |
$677 |
1) Federal Register: February 16, 2001, Pages 10695-10697).
[ The monthly FCA for each adult is .23 * (HSS poverty level for a single person)/12 to assure no marriage penalty due to the manner in which the poverty level is dependant on family size. The monthly FCA for each child is .23 * (the incremental increase of HSS poverty level for a family with one child over no child) ] A. Geezer
I don't know why you pinged me with that reply, but if you want to talk "unconstitutional" you might find this ineresting:
`SEC. 703. GOVERNMENT PURCHASES.
`(a) GOVERNMENT PURCHASES-
`(1) PURCHASES BY THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT- Purchases by the Federal Government of taxable property and services shall be subject to the tax imposed by section 101.
`(2) PURCHASE BY STATE GOVERNMENTS AND THEIR POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS- Purchases by State governments and their political subdivisions of taxable property and services shall be subject to the tax imposed by section 101.
`(b) CROSS REFERENCES-
-------------
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DIVISION OF RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS
SUMMARY OF TAX EXEMPTION DEVICES 2001
SALES AND USE TAX
(continued)
EXEMPTIONS FOR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES AND NONPROFIT ORGANIZATIONS
Sales to the Federal Government and Its Agencies
Sales of goods and services to the federal government or to any of its incorporated or unincorporated agencies or instrumentalities are exempt from the sales tax. Taxing purchases by the federal government would violate the U.S. Constitution, so the fiscal effect of this exemption has not been estimated.
------------
Government Activities:
A state may not tax the federal government, or another state government, that does not prevent the federal government from taxing its own agencies and creations.
No, ancient_qeezer, I am not.
, that does not prevent the federal government from taxing its own agencies and creations.
Ahem. If the government taxing itself generates revenue why don't we just have the government tax itself for their revenue?...What a putz!
BTW, the tax laws were for exempting all state sales tax to the federal government not only sales from the state...In other words ding dong, the U.S. Constitution prohibits, the state from mandating that sales to the federal government be taxed....by ANYONE....Get it?
No, ancient_qeezer, I am not.
You may not be, but the "Washington State" ruling is addressed to "Washington State" sales taxes. There are no and never have been federal sales taxes in the the state of Washington or anywhere else.
As usual you only perceive what you wish to see and not what is there.
Ahem. If the government taxing itself generates revenue
The federal government taxes the income of its judges. it also pays those taxes that are embedded in the price of consumption goods and services. SS recipients pay federal taxes out of SS money, federal employees and military pay federal taxes from federal dollars as well.
Treasury doesn't care about the route money takes to get to it's coffers.
the tax laws were for exempting all state sales tax
NRST is a federal tax lewislynn, not a "state" tax. Nothing in the Constitution prevents a government(state or federal) from levying a tax on itself.
Ahem. If the government taxing itself generates revenue
The federal government taxes the income of its judges. it also pays those taxes that are embedded in the price of consumption goods and services. SS recipients pay federal taxes out of SS money, federal employees and military pay federal taxes from federal dollars as well.
Treasury doesn't care about the route money takes to get to it's coffers.
the tax laws were for exempting all state sales tax
NRST is a federal tax lewislynn, not a "state" tax. Nothing in the Constitution prevents a government(state or federal) from levying a tax on itself.
In the 10th section of the 1st article, it is declared, that 'no state shall, without the consent of congress, lay any imposts or duties on imports or exports, except what may be absolutely necessary for executing its inspection laws;' and there is a like prohibition to laying any duty of tonnage. Here, then, is the whole restriction or limitation, attempted to be imposed by the constitution, on the power of the states to raise revenue, drecisely in the same manner, from the same subjects, and to the same extent, that any sovereign and independent state may do; and it never was understood by those who made, or those who received, the constitution, that any further restriction ever would, or could, be imposed.
A state sales tax on federal purposes is seen as a duty laid on an export to the federal government (i.e. tax on sales to an entity outside its jurisdiction.)
I must admit not having had the time to read all of the comments, but let me go back to the beginning a bit. per loin, I am sorry, but I don't know where you learned economics, but where I went to school, they taught us that raising tariffs will actually increase the cost of goods in the US, and will it ultimately destroy jobs. Low tariffs mean that goods that you want to buy that are cheaper to produce somewhere else, will be imported. If they are cheaper to produce in the US, they will be made domestically. If you pay more to produce goods domestically than they would cost to be produced abroad you are being inefficient and using resources (capital) inefficiently. If you use capital inefficiently (socialism), you are damaging a capitalist economy, slowing the rate of economic growth and destroying jobs.
The reason the US leads the world in all things technological is because it is the cheapest place to bring together enough intelligent people to create an innovative basis and an appropriate incentive structure for a very complex task. The only other places that are competitive with us in these things have similar structures already in place (German, Japan. )To do this elsewhere would require building universities, research facilities, etc.
Tariffs save jobs (temporarily) for low-skilled workers. The US economy is transforming from a manufacturing base into a service-base, the so-called post-industrial economy. IMHO we should think about how we can retrain lower-skilled workers so they can take part in the higher wages rather than take the disaterous course of tariffs that led to a deepening of the Great Depression.
Of course, since economics is called the dismal science, I could be wrong.
A short note on the specifics of the article also from an economists point of view. The more money I make, the more I love this tax. I can only buy so many consumer goods, thus I can only pay a "voluntary" tax so often. If investments are not taxed and neither is my income, the small percentage I would spend from my $300,000 a year on income would pale in comparison to what I am investing. This is a very regressive tax idea based on what percentage of income earned would go to paying it.
If you guys think this is fair and appropriate, I have no objections.
If you will send me the spreadsheets you calculated to answer my questions earlier, I will privately provide an email address. I am amazed that NRST proponents don't have a clear calculation to demonstrate that the 23% with FCA adjustment will indeed raise the same revenue as the current taxes it proposes to replace.
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