What about all that money sitting in roth accounts that has already been taxed?
4/29/2008 9:36:02 AM
People don't seem to want to address my complaints with the system: As DrSteveChaos pointed out, the sales tax is not 23% but in fact 30%. Similarly, as DrSteveChaos also pointed, I did fail to include the payroll taxes that employers do pay (FICA, SS, etc) which he said was about 6.5%. Therefore, accepting Marx's labor-price theory, we can asume retail pre-tax prices will fall 6.5% due to tax savings before jumping 30% due to the tax. So, what previously sold for $100 will now sell for $93.50 + $28.05tax = $121.55 for an after-tax price increase of 21.55%. This is fine for the employed because their wages are fixed by contract between employer and employee. In effect, everyones bank account will have been marked down about 21% and everyone's contracted salary will have been marked up 21%. Thus, the old and currently wealthy will be poorer overnight and the young and employed will be richer overnight by exactly the same amount. No one has mentioned any part of the Fair Tax which would make me question my analysis.
4/29/2008 10:38:46 AM
4/29/2008 11:47:56 AM
Well that sucks.
4/29/2008 12:07:48 PM
except the opposite?or are you saying the current way sucks?
4/29/2008 12:09:09 PM
i think im one of the only democrats to actually like the idea of fair tax. Am I the only one? Whats wrong with me
4/29/2008 12:09:54 PM
nah...i know 3 others(myself included) that like it
4/29/2008 12:11:09 PM
I'm saying it sucks for people who have a ton of money saved up that has already been taxed.
4/29/2008 12:56:56 PM
yeah it sure sucks for people that have a lot of money built up...
4/29/2008 12:57:58 PM
4/29/2008 5:18:57 PM
4/29/2008 5:37:08 PM
^I've already answered what is considered a new product..check a few posts back. I would suggest visiting the FairTax.org website for detailed answers on the other minutia of the bill. What is tiring is when people change the FairTax in someway and then attack it. The plan isn't perfect. I'm not claiming that. What I'm saying is that it's miles better than the current crappy system.
4/29/2008 6:02:49 PM
If any dem was running and proposing a fairtax or flat tax, they would get my vote. Period. If there was a chance they could get it through. Which will never happen, bc it takes away one of thier election tools...class warfare.
4/29/2008 6:05:03 PM
4/29/2008 9:54:34 PM
^Yes. Companies pass along the costs associated with paying thier share of payroll taxes, along with the federal tax components all along the production process. The farmer raising the wheat, the company making it into bread, the companiy that makes the bag to hold the bread, the company that ships it to the store, the grocery store that sells it. Each company along the way passes along their federal tax components in their prices. The embedded tax is higher in some products and lower in others..but the ave is 22% of the price.The FairTax eliminates federal income tax, Social security and medicare witholding, as well as capital gains, and death tax. It shifts these embedded taxes into a 23% inclusive embedded sales tax. The amount that is collected stays the same, just the method is changed.
4/30/2008 12:09:21 AM
i think a negative side effect of this is that people will be more stingy...plus the underground black market is the shit for me cause then i'd really be saving a lot of money
4/30/2008 12:14:20 AM
^ Just start a small business and right everything off as a business expense.It's the white-people-method* of paying taxes.* as coined by South Park
4/30/2008 12:20:28 AM
4/30/2008 12:23:40 AM
^^for real...that oil change was business related yo[Edited on April 30, 2008 at 12:23 AM. Reason : .]
4/30/2008 12:23:47 AM
4/30/2008 9:44:50 AM
4/30/2008 11:39:49 AM
I still don't understand. You say the taxes are shifted but then you say the taxes are already embedded. Which is it? As someone else pointed out the prices of stuff would go up, wouldn't they now.
4/30/2008 11:55:59 AM
4/30/2008 12:41:46 PM
^From FairTax.org:Remember that everyone will be getting more of their paycheck, and the prebate returns even more spending power. This from FairTaxGroups.com:
5/1/2008 1:56:40 AM
5/1/2008 9:48:49 AM
5/1/2008 10:10:43 AM
EarthDogg, that is more right than not. I was directing my ire at people that argued prices would not rise because of 'hidden taxes' which was bullshit. Now, prices relative to take-home pay will improve markedly: all those with a high paying job in the 25+% tax bracket will be absolutely better off (not by much, but there is no doubt they will improve). This benefit, however, is coming from those in a low tax bracket which are now paying 17% more for all goods above the prebate. In other words, if the pre-bate covers $17k of spending, then anyone earning $25k which previously paid little or nothing are now paying 17% more on $8k of it. Similarly, those without a job, such as the retired which are living on savings which previously paid 0% are now paying 17%. So, like we keep saying, the fairtax shifts economic well being between the young, old, or under-employed to the middle-aged or well-employed.
5/1/2008 10:22:48 AM
5/1/2008 10:38:09 AM
Do you guys not see how much old workers will get fucked over by this?
5/1/2008 10:38:42 AM
5/1/2008 10:55:12 AM
so because some would not benefit as much as others, we should continue to use the broken system forever? I am sure FairTax could be tweaked to ensure nobody comes out on the negative.
5/1/2008 10:56:08 AM
Why don't we just get rid of social security too, while we are at it? That would greatly benefit young people like me.
5/1/2008 10:58:04 AM
you are right, we need to get rid of it, or fix it. you and I will never see a dime of the SS money we are paying in. that money would be better served in our own private investments.
5/1/2008 11:03:49 AM
Yeah, but currently old people are depending on it.
5/1/2008 11:47:41 AM
just because you strive to fix a system like SS doesnt mean you take it away from those depending on it. something like that is gradual...you grandfather in a group a certain age and higher. you are so worried about them but what about the rest of us? as I said, likely, none of us will ever see a dime of the millions we put into it. thats not right.
5/1/2008 12:17:09 PM
Well it's not right for them to not receive any of the money they put in either.So, what do you propose. 40+ you get SS but less than that, no SS for you?
5/1/2008 1:04:15 PM
40 is probably a little low...I would say 50 or so and above to continue to receive the money they have been promised. The rest of us would have the option of putting aside that money in our own private investments. Anyone who is 40 and counting on SS as their retirement is screwed at this point anyway. You cant live on that income.
5/1/2008 1:10:38 PM
How could old people continue to receive money if people our age wouldn't be funding it any more?
5/1/2008 1:16:17 PM
logically, there would be some gap for the government to bridge. however, the longer we wait, the larger that gap gets before it completely runs out and is in the red.
5/1/2008 1:21:00 PM
Make sense to me, but you'd piss off a lot of 40 year olds who have been contributing to SS for 20+ years.
5/1/2008 1:22:55 PM
hell, most 20 and 30 year-olds I know now are pissed that we knowingly still give a substantial percentage of our paychecks to SS and will never see a dime of it.
5/1/2008 1:25:13 PM
Well yeah, I'm pissed, but obviously the younger people are going to be more for this than the older people.
5/1/2008 1:26:02 PM
5/1/2008 3:52:18 PM
5/1/2008 6:41:03 PM
And it is your opinion that the Fair tax would be better than the current system. My objection is scale and you did not address it. A 30% sales tax is not new, it has occured before in history. It always ended poorly. There is a reason the highest sales tax in the nation is only 10.25%; much above that and the tax stops collecting more money. Meanwhile, income taxes are currently assessed well above 50% in many countries today with little devastation to show for it. The reason this proposal has received any research is because it sounds nice, nothing more. http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/2008/01/why_the_fair_ta.htmlAnd I mention a VAT because it, and only it, can collect such percentages as you are suggesting, economically speaking.
5/1/2008 9:09:35 PM
5/1/2008 11:54:59 PM
5/2/2008 12:23:24 AM
If this ever passes I'm moving when I retire.
5/2/2008 10:20:14 AM
5/2/2008 10:45:45 AM
You think the old rich guys in congress will pass it?
5/2/2008 10:52:34 AM