Since we are all talking about this fiscal cliff, I have seen mention by many of implementing & increasing federal taxes on many things... income, carbon emissions, sin taxes, luxury taxes, etc.Should the US federal government impose a VAT (value added tax) to all goods and services in the US so they don't have to cut spending? In the UK they do this. In the UK, they have a 20% VAT...is it feasible in the US to have a 20% VAT?Obama said in 2010 he was open to the idea of a VAT; however, his aides rejected it. Maybe Obama should consider a VAT if the US federal government is going to continue to spend at the rate it is.
11/9/2012 4:41:44 PM
or maybe, we could...wait for it....stop spending so much?
11/9/2012 4:46:32 PM
20% is way too highNot that a VAT would gain traction anytime soon no matter how high or low it may be
11/9/2012 4:53:02 PM
I support a VAT. Anything to tax consumption instead of investment and savings is a good idea in my book.Set the VAT somewhere in the range of 6-10%, and offset some of those added revenues with cuts to the corporate tax rate.
11/9/2012 5:20:53 PM
11/9/2012 5:21:43 PM
^^Would you be in favor of a consumption tax that replaces income taxes?
11/9/2012 5:50:57 PM
11/9/2012 6:13:06 PM
11/9/2012 6:38:26 PM
Just to point out, the UK has an income tax and a VAT tax.I think the VAT tax is dumb, but if the US is like the UK, they should start off at 5% and then move up to 20% like the UK did in 2011. People don't notice the subtle changes.[Edited on November 9, 2012 at 9:23 PM. Reason : .]
11/9/2012 9:18:07 PM
VAT in lieu of income tax would be acceptable... would encourage investment, saving, etc (personal responsibility)
11/9/2012 10:02:42 PM
^Yep....or VAT in addition to greatly simplified and reduced income tax.
11/9/2012 10:14:21 PM
Like all the Mediterranean countries that are big savers
11/10/2012 5:51:32 AM
They don't have our kind of sales taxes in the uk.20% tax added by the federal government, on top of state and local sales taxes, would be ridiculous.
11/10/2012 7:29:05 AM
What about a 20% VAT in addition to sales taxes on luxury items, like boats, clothing items over 25 dollars, etc.?
11/10/2012 8:58:41 AM
yes, we need to punish those evil boat buyers!
11/10/2012 9:10:30 AM
Well let's be honest - boats are pretty much on the top of the list of completely pointless bullshit for most people
11/10/2012 9:26:20 AM
You can say that about anything; anyone can justify a tax on any item they deem to be a luxury item. It's a horrible idea. Either go to a flat income tax for all or a national sales tax for all.
11/10/2012 9:35:40 AM
This type of tax scheme would shift our barely progressive tax system to clearly regressive. So if you believe in progressive taxation then it just isn't an option until you get into rebates, etc.When you include mostly flat/regressive state taxes, fees, and payroll taxes then our overall tax system is barely progressive:http://ctj.org/ctjreports/2012/04/who_pays_taxes_in_america.phpmore evidence that overall state tax systems are regressive:
11/10/2012 10:20:59 AM
11/10/2012 11:00:51 AM
How about having VAT being based on your income as a progressive solution. You have a national ID card that you have to swipe before you buy anything.At incomes above $100,000, the VAT kicks in.At incomes at $200,000, the VAT would be 50%.At incomes at $300,000 the VAT would be 66.7%.At incomes at $400,000 the VAT would be 75%.Etc.
11/10/2012 1:05:10 PM
...then it wouldn't be a VATand that idea would cost more than any possible revenue[Edited on November 10, 2012 at 1:07 PM. Reason : ]
11/10/2012 1:06:39 PM
Maybe the best option is just to drop the VAT and just tax people that make more than $1 million with a 75% tax like France if we want a more progressive tax system for the US. We could also do what Vermont does where property tax is based off your income.
11/10/2012 1:15:21 PM
11/10/2012 2:25:41 PM
11/10/2012 4:30:10 PM
Yes, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marginal_propensity_to_save
11/10/2012 8:08:48 PM
The EU has shown that you can implement a VAT while keeping the tax code progressive.Of the various sources of new revenue that the Govt can tap into, a natinwide VAT is about the least damaging to economic growth. But it'll never gain traction because it would violate the Grover pledge that the House GOP signed, and the Dems don't like it because of its regressive nature.
11/10/2012 9:33:53 PM
nm[Edited on November 11, 2012 at 1:25 AM. Reason : .]
11/11/2012 1:20:03 AM
11/12/2012 11:23:40 AM
^ if you go by dollars, the majority of capital owned is owned by the rich.http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.htmlI mean, the benefit that a reduction in capital gains tax would have on the poor is basically a rounding error. When you include debt, then you're going to have to get to like the top fucking quintile before their net worth is actually positive.This is the nation we live in. It is ugly. The median household net worth is <$10k for blacks.The problem with a consumption tax is that the rich won't pay it. When you go to the store to buy Gatorade you don't consider how you can potentially avoid the VAT, but if you're buying a yacht, you might have a financial advisor trying to find every loophole on Earth to exploit. It's to the point that a VAT is essentially unenforceable to the rich.But that's not the real tragedy. The real tragedy is the taxation schemes that destroy low-yield real investments. If we had better financial markets we could get the poor into the capital markets. The commodity that the rich monopolize so well isn't exactly capital itself, it's financial innovation. Cash itself is a tax. When corporations hold cash, they hold "cash equivalents" instead - bonds, often in the form of treasuries.That means that for the megacorps, their cash doesn't degrade in value much over time, but any cash that you hold does. The differential is paid for in our tax dollars through interest payments, no biggie.I haven't even gotten into depreciation yet. Depreciation counts your writeoffs in nominal terms, but the value of it still degrades due to inflation. Because of crazy rules like these, investing is basically a losing proposition without financial engineering. This creates a disincentive for long-term investment. This is why companies like GE decided to forget about real engineering and innovation in the 1990s and nearly sunk their companies with monstrosities like GE Capital. It's not just their leadership, our politicians had virtually mandated the shift with tax and fiscal policy.
11/12/2012 12:08:14 PM
11/12/2012 12:41:44 PM
But you can't. People will earn their incomes in places that have strong social programs and then spend it in places that don't tax as much.Taxing at point of consumption is ultimately tied with taking away freedom of movement.Are you going to walk out to the docks on the NC coast, inspect, and prosecute the ships that fly a Cayman Islands flag? Because if not, why wouldn't I just buy a ship in another nation and sail it here?Ok, that was an easy one for me to cherry pick. How about housing costs? Are you going to charge a VAT on the purchase of a $750,000 home in Cary? Because if not, your VAT isn't high enough. What about resale? Do they get some of their VAT back? People will have a mortgage and never pay the VAT on that part of the capital in the first place. But wait, then why would they ever own a house, as opposed to an all-interest mortgage? Are you going to charge the VAT tax on that.What about people who rent? Are you really going to charge them 25% of their rent?What about charitable deductions?What about farmer's markets?What about health care? You're going to charge a VAT on health care?What about insurance? Would it be charged with the premium or at the point of payout?
11/12/2012 12:51:50 PM
Pat Choate (Perot's second VP) wrote a book basically proposing this and explaining why it's both better than the current system and less regressive than a "Fair Tax." Worth a quick read.
11/14/2012 9:52:31 AM
So how would it work for imports? Exports?
11/14/2012 10:07:00 AM
Imports would be taxed exactly like domestically produced goods consumed domestically.Exports would not be taxed, as they are not consumed domestically.This is two-fold. It helps level the playing field at home and abroad. The goods that are exported could be sold cheaper due to the lack of "income taxes" and goods that are imported would be taxes at the same rate as domestic goods which would bring the costs in line. It instantly makes US goods more competitive in both markets and thereby reduces our trade deficit.
11/15/2012 10:34:44 AM
Yeah because the lack of US competitiveness is totally about prices on goods, not labor.[Edited on November 15, 2012 at 10:45 AM. Reason : .]
11/15/2012 10:44:46 AM
Labor is certainly a factor, but taxes are as well.The US has one of the highest mean corporate tax rates in the world, along with Japan & Germany. Corporations are not dumb, as they pass their taxes along to those who consume their product. If taxes on corporations were reduced, competition calls for consumer prices of the taxed goods to fall. Labor is also a factor in the consumer prices, but not the only one.[Edited on November 16, 2012 at 12:02 PM. Reason : s]
11/16/2012 12:02:21 PM
11/16/2012 2:08:54 PM
11/16/2012 2:52:34 PM
11/19/2012 11:32:57 AM
11/21/2012 12:52:55 AM
11/21/2012 10:43:13 AM
the text messaging example is the exception, not the rule
11/21/2012 10:49:56 AM
Pick anything else, text messaging is just the easiest to explain, but the same concept exists in gas, cars, computers, homes, whichever. In each of these industries, in the real world, cost does not perfectly correlate with price. It does somewhat, but it's not a precise correlation, there's a lot more at work there.
11/21/2012 11:01:06 AM
so your theory is that there is collusion among all businesses in the same field that "fix" prices across the board?I contend that price correlates with cost and risk. If it doesn't explain the competitive bid market.
11/21/2012 12:01:28 PM
My theory is simply that there is a great deal more at work determining price than just cost. Corporate taxes play a complicated role in effecting price, they aren't simply "passed on to the consumer". They are passed on in some degree, but it's not as simple as just bumping up price.
11/21/2012 1:11:26 PM
12/1/2012 12:07:12 AM