2/17/2006 8:24:23 AM
2/17/2006 9:33:22 AM
^^ If you had any economist in you, you'd already know the result of odd policies (such as this). For starters, new stuff will be somewhat cheaper to manufacture (eliminates compliance costs for employers, eliminates the compounding effect of the various tax regimes, etc). Nevertheless, these savings will not filter through for months, if not a year, so the cost of replacement for used items will have been increased. So, as an economist, when you have a finite market (used furniture) and the price of new furniture increases the result will be higher prices for used furniture. But the effect should not be too painful as you get to take home your entire salary from day one instead of just 80% of it. Ultimately, after many years, the economy will have adjusted to the new tax regime: many workers will keep their ungarnished wages, some workers will bid down their wages, prices will fall slightly, the government will lay off 3/4 of the IRS, and after-tax prices will have risen by about 18%. The price differential between used and new will have increased slightly but you must remember: prices are set by what people will pay, not some magic unchangeable value. If everyone starts buying only used cars it will drive up the price of a used car until the people who previously would have purchased a new car go ahead and do so now. In other words, if the sales tax is huge (23%) then the MSRP of a new car will be lower than the sticker price for a used car. You won't notice because odds are the dealer will go ahead and factor in the tax before writting the price on the sticker, restoring the common sense notion of a new car being more expensive than a used car.
2/17/2006 9:50:15 AM
http://www4.ncsu.edu/~gsparson/data/fairtax3.avivideohttp://www4.ncsu.edu/~gsparson/data/fairtax.htmtax progression
2/17/2006 10:31:54 AM
2/17/2006 11:06:36 AM
2/17/2006 11:35:32 AM
http://money.cnn.com/2005/09/06/pf/taxes/consumptiontax_0510/
2/17/2006 12:42:00 PM
So lower manufacturing costs, combined with dumb comsumers, will compinsate for the fact that auto companies will have to take a ~20% hit in gross income in order to survive the adjustment period? Or is the best scenario on ein which the cost of used cars skyrocket?Oh, and will houses be taxed at 23% as well, because if so, the Fair Tax is truly the best idea ever.
2/17/2006 2:10:30 PM
2/17/2006 11:16:24 PM
best idea ever
2/17/2006 11:24:42 PM
So 4 more pages and several topics later and I still haven't gotten an adequate response to the 3 failures of this system I point out in my old thread.I even emailed Fairtax.org and 3 of the professors that support it, and I never heard a response. The fact is that any large scale tax system MUST tax income. Not taxing income makes the system regressive, anyone that says otherwise does not understand percentages. It also doesn't work to only tax final goods, everyone would incorporated themselves and avoid tax on most every major purchase, I mean some people do that now anyways just to avoid 2% and 6% taxes. This is why every modern government in the world has income taxes.
2/18/2006 12:21:56 AM
Kris:llboyd asked your very questions at FairTaxGroups.com http://fairtaxgroups.com/index.php?topic=146.0Check out the site, you'll have hours of fun asking them all of your other challenging questions.
2/18/2006 12:42:14 AM
Ok, so we're not firing the income tax bureaucracy ofterall?That was literally the only attractive aspect of this whole thing.P.S.- that forum is hilarious. It's like 30 EarthDogg's all in one page, and they still can't even give a straight answer even to each other. It's like a freaking used car salesmans' forum.In response to the "it's repessive" argument:
2/18/2006 11:32:51 AM
2/18/2006 12:47:22 PM
The Fair Tax is a good idea in principle. That is a tax system based on taxing consumption is preferable to one based on taxing income.Kris has pointed out that the tax must be regressive at some point along the distribution. This is true in terms of collections. However, (1) You can place the regressivity line whereever you want. That is the tax can be progressive up to about $150,000 and then start to become regressive. I am not too tempted to cry about regressivity issues between the rich and the near-rich(2) It is regressive only in terms of collection. The regressivity stems from the fact that the rich consume less of their income than do the poor. But if they don't consume it, then what do they do with it? They must invest it. When you invest resources you don't lose your claim on them but you do lose your use of them. Instead of you using them "society" uses them. You retian a claim but it is only a claim. In fact, if you never come to collect your claim then in terms of actual resource usage you have donated your stuff to the collective. In practice the wealthy hope that they and their children will get to slowly recollect their claim over generations. However, as they do they will consume it and pay tax on it. While it is still out in the collective use, there is no reason to tax it because you are hurting the collective.Now that all being said the fair tax has its problemsNumber one is that putting the entire burden of taxation on the retailer creates to much incentive for abuse. Selling off the books is simply too profitable. Instead their should probably be a destination based VAT (Value Added Tax). That is seller pays the tax at every stage but gets a credit for the tax paid so far. The result is that you only owe taxes when you sell something for more than you bought it for. That is you only pay taxes on the added value of the product.Its sort of like a capital gains tax on everything. It has the same effect as taxing comsumption. Yet it puts less of a burden on the retailer. Retailing is a penny-business anway and so the actual tax paid by the retailer is small.[Edited on February 18, 2006 at 2:58 PM. Reason : .]
2/18/2006 2:55:32 PM
2/18/2006 2:56:31 PM
2/18/2006 6:04:57 PM
2/18/2006 7:15:24 PM
2/18/2006 7:42:56 PM
^^Under most systems your truck is not exempt. Usually, it is defined as a retail sales tax, not a consumer goods sales tax. The truck is bought retail. That is equipment, machinery and software are not exempt from most versions of the retail sales tax. Under many versions, fixed investment (offices, factories) are not exempt either. In this way the tax is basiclly like taking a percentage cut off of GDP.
2/18/2006 8:03:31 PM
2/18/2006 8:43:47 PM
^ Yes, and under the current system many services are tax-exempt as well. Or are you saying that just because the current system has such exemptions any and all systems must have similar exemptions?
2/18/2006 9:51:01 PM
No, I'm saying that if fairtax is completely set on removing their so called "embedded taxes", they aren't going to be able to tax intermediate goods.
2/18/2006 11:55:45 PM
2/19/2006 12:01:02 AM
^ Yes, but the purpose of taxation is to raise money, not teach the public that government has costs. As such, a single VAT would be a much better system.
2/19/2006 12:10:54 AM
2/19/2006 12:14:10 AM
2/19/2006 9:02:49 AM
The VAT is superior because it doesn't force collections all at one point. Suppose you are furniture retailer selling couches. Before tax price $2000. After tax price $2460. You can earn $430 just by selling a single couch under the table. That is horrible pressure to put on one indivdual.In addition, there is always confusion about whether the purchaser should be tax exempt. What if the pruchased item is going to be used to perform a service. Is the item retail or wholesale? How are you going to treat equipment, machinery and software?Are you really going to require a flower girl on the street to remit her 23% in taxes.Most of these issues vanish with the VAT because the tax you are responcible for is proportional to the size of your business. Small retailers have small Value Added.
2/19/2006 9:19:11 AM
For example: I am Wal-Mart. my average markup is 20%. The VAT is 20%. My effective tax rate is 4%. I would have to be an idiot to risk going to prison to save 4 cents on the dollar. So would my distributer, my manufacturer, etc. etc. There are more payers, yes, which means more people to keep track of. However, the incentive to cheat is dramatically reduced. Also, the trouble of the internet is dramatically reduced. So what if they snuck the products out the back door at the assembly plant. We have already taxed it at the parts maker, the resource extractor, the shipper, etc. Yes, we didn't get to tax the final product at 20%, but we did get 10% of the product, good enough until they get caught. The only drawback is that the average tax payer would then have even less idea how much government really costs.
2/19/2006 10:43:45 AM
2/19/2006 10:55:45 AM
There are two problems here: raising tax money to fund government, and keeping government from giving away the shop. We are merely pointing out that a VAT is superior when it comes to raising tax money to fund government. You are correct, as we have stated, a sales tax would make government activity more public and more difficult "giving away the shop." So, our point is simple: implimenting a VAT and then finding some other way of reigning in government. Only if none can be found should we give up the better system. For example, we will probably have to pass an amendment to the constitution to do this, it should read thusly:
2/19/2006 11:45:08 AM
I prefer the Fairtax, but A VAT tax would still be much better than the income tax. The VAT tax would have to be clearly stated on all sales receipts as they do in Canada. Every time they buy a beer or a hockey stick, they get to see how much VAT tax they are paying. This feature has been crucial in restraining their country's money-hungry politicians. Canada has about a 7% VAT- clearly stated on all receipts. VATs in Europe are around 20% and not stated on sales receipts. A VAT tax would also have to include the repeal of the 16th amendment. Most VATs were added on to existing income taxes.- this would truly be a nightmare if done here. To sell the plan, crafty politicians would offer to lower income taxes and start out with a lower VAT. Then the lobbyists would move in and work on gradually increasing both taxes.[Edited on February 19, 2006 at 9:30 PM. Reason : .]
2/19/2006 9:29:54 PM
^ I agree, there should be more visibility of taxes. For instance, it makes me a little sick every timeI hear people happy about how much $$ they are getting in there tax refund. It was your money to begin with, you shouldn't be happy that the government overcharged you for the past year. We ought to get back to paying taxes once a year so people could feel the pain of it more and think harder about why government should be smaller. I am of course talking about those people which actually paid taxes, not the rediculous "tax return" of those people who are "poor" enough to get a "refund". Many of my relatives lie about there income so they can make money on the government. Lately they make about $4000-$5000 each year! Just a blank check rewarding them for cheating the tax system. Lovely. It is an often misunderstood statisitic that indian immigrants to this country make the most $$ of newly immigrated peoples, the truth is that Chinese immigrants make much more, they're just not so stupid to report it to the IRS. This is why you must pay cash in Chinatown. At the very least we need to close this loophole and stop paying tax cheats money.
2/19/2006 11:37:34 PM
2/20/2006 12:13:40 AM
^ Wouldn't work. The fact is, it is human nature: we see others earning far more than us in life and we resent it. We don't mind paying excessive taxes because we imagine those we resent paying far more. If you want to really fight against taxation then you must personify the "cheater" because the only thing we hate more than the success of others is playing the chump. The quickest way to illicit tax reform is if everytime anyone filed a tax return they imagined their boss laughing all the way to the tax attorney's office. Updated Amendment (getting long, anyone think it should be shortened?):section 1: Amendment XVI is hereby repealed.section 2: The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes from all duly constituted businesses in proportion to the Value Added by the immediate stage of production, without apportionment among the several states, and without regard to any census or enumeration.section 3: This Value Added Tax shall be applied without descrimation to all businesses regardless of location, activity, or ultimate destination at a uniform rate to be determined by appropriate legislation.section 4: The total sum of taxes collected upon all items shall be listed separately upon the bill of sale. section 5: This article shall be inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by conventions in the several states, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the date of the submission hereof to the states by the Congress.Any further additions necessary? I was hoping to send it to my congressman.
2/20/2006 1:14:33 AM
Good FairTax white paper:http://www.fairtax.org/pdfs/Tax_compliance_facts.pdf
2/22/2006 10:22:44 AM
fairtax is not that great but better than the current system imo
4/15/2015 6:25:06 PM
no one cares that your opinion prefers regressive taxes
4/15/2015 6:32:57 PM
Not sure why anyone talks about the Fair Tax anymore, when both parties claim to care about growing Inequality.Fair Tax would make that problem worse in every way.
4/15/2015 6:55:00 PM
4/15/2015 7:25:25 PM
^falsefairtax could create a shit ton of jobs which would help the less fortunate.also, synapse, as someone who claims to care about campaign finance corruption, the fairtax would eliminate billions in funds corporations have to pay to keep their loopholes.
4/16/2015 5:49:34 AM
obama has overseen some of the biggest job creation in history, and it hasn't helped inequality.you also create jobs by giving money to the poor and middle class, not the rich.
4/16/2015 1:52:55 PM
until i learned about the ridiculous credits / deductions that can be purchased like film credits and conservation easements i was more pro fairtax - i'm now pro loophole with our current system
4/16/2015 2:22:23 PM
4/16/2015 2:36:05 PM
^logic fail
4/16/2015 5:19:03 PM
^^^ tell me more? I though there were basically no loopholes in the FairTax system.
4/16/2015 9:35:32 PM
^ I meant loopholes with the current system
4/16/2015 10:15:27 PM
^^The current tax system is very friendly to that invoke range-- not surprising considering the incomes of people in congress.The vast majority of Americans are really poor compared to most people here. They don't have money saved up, and any putting hundreds or thousands of dollars more tax burden is seriously crippling. It forces people into debt or away from education, it keeps them in low paying jobs. It's a vicious cyclone of negative effects. Helping this demographic should be the goal of the tax code. It's not the governments job to try and punish people for being poor, and it seems like conservatives are happy to use the govnerment for this purpose. But a fair tax with a prebate is just an attempt at creating a progressive tax but not calling it that. It's equally susceptible to the criticisms of the current tax, and would eventually just become a tax system with deductions and credits after a few congressional cycles. If you believe in the prebate, just embrace a real progressive tax code and advoCate policies that emphasize fairness.
4/17/2015 12:48:30 AM
Income tax violates spirit of 4th amendment. Need a warrant to see personal papers
4/18/2017 1:22:45 PM
nice bump
4/18/2017 2:36:35 PM