7/22/2008 9:37:24 AM
7/22/2008 9:42:53 AM
agent, the fairtax isnt a sales tax so I dont think they would refund it.Ive been to mexico 4 times and have never had my sales tax refunded.
7/22/2008 10:14:09 AM
7/22/2008 10:17:49 AM
7/22/2008 10:34:03 AM
What was wrong with my numbers? Similarly, with the way you phrased it, it sounds as if every object in my home that has not been taxed will be taxed whenever I sell it... is that the case or does this only occur if I sell it to a Canadian?
7/22/2008 7:55:08 PM
bump by request
2/19/2010 9:30:02 AM
Is the requester going to post? What was the bump for?
2/21/2010 6:13:37 PM
Sorry, I asked it to be bumped, didn't realize it had been.I still don't see why so many people are completely against the idea of a consumption based tax. The fact that the tax code is so absolutely complicated now with loophole after loophole, it would just be easier if the sales tax was a much higher rate. I'd love to actually bring home the salary that was negotiated when I was hired to do my job. I save as much as I can during the year as well.I was just furious when I did my taxes this year. I followed the instructions on the form and was therefore claiming 2 on federal. So was the wife. When I did our taxes this year, came up with a $2,700 bill to the feds. That's just nonsense. I know the first gut reaction is to claim it's a pointless idea because it taxes the poor. How does the rebate for the necessities not counter that?I also think it would really helps to bring in taxes on the income that is never reported to the government.Now i'm not as well versed as many of you, and I've only read the Fair Tax book once, so I'm prepared to be ripped apart. I just personally feel that the way our taxes are handled in this country are so far out of whack that at least SOMETHING has to be done.
2/22/2010 9:15:41 AM
What are the details regarding what goods will be taxed? Final goods only? New goods only? Will food and clothing be taxed? Services?
2/22/2010 10:22:47 AM
^All goods and services would be taxed (about 23% inclusive, 30% exclusive). Each month every taxpayer would recieve a "prebate" which would cover the tax on expenses up to the poverty level.
2/22/2010 10:38:12 AM
^everyone would get the prebate... but technically everyone now becomes a taxpayer. Just wanting to clarify that for those not familar with it, I know you are.
2/22/2010 11:55:27 AM
2/22/2010 1:01:03 PM
And 23% is too high for a sales tax.
2/22/2010 1:12:01 PM
not if you arent paying other taxes. imoExpanding the tax base is the key here. Also making it simple and one set of rules for everyone makes people less likely to cheat the system, as now where people get discriminated against.. so they feel they need to protect their income more. Why rich people take dividends instead of income. I dont blame them.
2/22/2010 1:20:42 PM
The main problem is self-incorporation, the difference in a person and a corporation is really meaningless. I am essentially a corporation that employs myself, I wouldn't file myself as that in the current tax system because I would get taxed twice on income, but fairtax wouldn't have that problem. It would reduce many of my expenses as they could be filed as B-2-B, for example the car I drive to work, food and lodging, computer, gas, etc. I wouldn't be able to work without these things, my work is an intermediate good used to produce what my company makes which could or could not be filed as an final good. Not only would you have most people able to legally dodge paying this tax, but you'd have companies lobbying to try and get their good able to be considered an intermediate good for self-incorporated people.
2/22/2010 1:23:36 PM
I see your point Kris. I havent read the book in awhile, but my thought it was just the final product/retail.I suppose that would work. Your taxes would be lower, so your costs would be lower. So you could either leave your prices as is, and keep the extra profit. (which is fine by me) Or you might have to lower your prices bc of one of your competitors. However, I do see your point on where do you draw the line.
2/22/2010 1:39:02 PM
The real problem is that the fairtax goes by where the line for final goods is drawn now, and assumes it won't change. The problem is that the line is drawn where it is now BECAUSE of the income tax system. A fairtax system would really cause the line to be drawn more accurately based on the definition of a final good, unfortunately significantly less items actually are final goods and it would cause fairtax to generate very little revenue.
2/22/2010 1:44:36 PM
^im not sure I agree with that. Some people hold onto their money like its boiling water. Im all for the idea of letting people keep what they earn and having our govt treat everyone equally with regard to our tax structure. I do think people will not spend the same they do now with more money. Hopefully many will invest it, taxfree, which will expand business and lower the dependence on SS. I have a bunch of people whose retirement is SS only. Our tax system should be designed to fund our govt. Instead its misused for political gain. Seperating the two will do wonders for our country.
2/22/2010 1:50:59 PM
You're completely missing what I'm saying. The problem is what you define as final goods. They think that this whole group of things will be taxable final goods. The fact is that they are not really final goods, and would be changed to fall under that umbrella of non-taxed intermediate goods. Things like my gas to and from work, my house, my car, food, power, cable, phone, etc. I wouldn't be able to work without these, and essentially they are intermediate goods that I use to produce my labor, which I sell to my company as an intermediate good. This reduces the amount of taxable goods siginficantly, making it essentially just a big luxury tax. It's just a flawed system, and it's amazing that this fairy tale has made it nearly as far as it has.[Edited on February 22, 2010 at 2:05 PM. Reason : ]
2/22/2010 2:03:56 PM
^ I know we've had this conversation before, but I'm still not convinced that "final good" is as difficult as you're making it out to be. In your example about, you argue (and people probably would) that your car, your food and your home are all intermediate goods if you're self employed but they aren't. When you sell your "product" you are not selling the car as well or your house in any way that is similar to a contractor buying a bucket of nails to build your house or a baker buying flour as an ingredient for bread. That we even begin to think of your car or your home as an intermediate good seems to me to be a result of our current tax system, not because they actually are in anyone's mind (except tax accountants of course)For that matter though, I'm not sure why we need to avoid this "double taxation" anyway. Lower the tax rate and call it the cost of doing business, just like any other expense. Is there a reason why the double taxation thing is particularly important to avoid if we're going to "prebate" everyone?[Edited on February 22, 2010 at 2:08 PM. Reason : dgh]
2/22/2010 2:07:05 PM
no, you would pay the taxes on your gas, cars, etc when you buy them. I think the criteria of what wouldnt be charged the tax would be if an individual couldnt buy it. I dont think you could tax every part of the process or parts at whatever rate and then at the final sale without really increasing the cost of goods.
2/22/2010 2:09:28 PM
2/22/2010 2:23:51 PM
A taxi driver also doesn't (usually) drive their own car.
2/22/2010 2:48:48 PM
2/22/2010 2:51:06 PM
2/22/2010 3:11:12 PM
I have a question about the prebate:Will we be able to write these $10k checks because Medicare and SS will no longer exist, or is it the tax structure completely independent of cuts to wealth redistribution programs.
2/22/2010 3:47:45 PM
No kris, the person who made the car wouldnt have been taxed on the production. It is only the final sale. So the suppliers wouldnt have been taxed on the way up of production. (like it is now) Thus the cost to produce these goods will be lower to make. And the cost to employ someone will be lower.However, when you buy a car whether for business or personal... you will pay the "sales tax". Which you do now, AND get to pay your income and employment taxes... awesome. So you can say you are getting 1. sales tax on car 2. sales tax on gas 3. income tax 4. SS tax 5. state income tax 6. Medicare tax. How about that 6 dip currently. I could say 8 dip if you count the employers contributions to SS/Medicare.Boone, I dont think the idea behind the fairtax is to get rid of SS or medicare. Just collect those taxes out of the fairtax itself, where everyone pays. Surely you would have to restructure SS bc you can no longer track who pays in what. Thus expanding the tax base from 150M to 300M(not really, but close)
2/22/2010 4:50:56 PM
2/22/2010 5:45:47 PM
You seem to be the only person having a problem defining intermediate good. Everyone else seems to be in agreement that it is a good purchased with the intent on using it to manufacture, or be transferred with, some other good or service.Are their edge cases? Of course, but they are not in and of themselves good reason to reject the idea out of hand.
2/22/2010 7:13:59 PM
2/22/2010 7:50:09 PM
^no. Neither is the electricity used to run a factor. One would pay taxes on that too.is there some kind of business card you flash at the BP that gets you out of paying tax for gas? If so, how can i get one?
2/22/2010 8:18:21 PM
2/22/2010 8:57:59 PM
From FairTax.org..
2/22/2010 11:42:02 PM
I love debating things that will never happen.
2/22/2010 11:43:17 PM
Well Earthdogg, how are individuals different from contractors? They just sell labor. The difference between an individual and a corporation isn't all that clear, we are essentially all corporations, we just don't file like that due to double taxation in the current tax code. It's not that individuals are "scamming the system" they are just gaining the benefits they rightfully deserve that are given to corporations in your system. Please, explain why self-incorporation would be illegal in fairtax.
2/22/2010 11:56:41 PM
Nowhere does it say that self-incorporation is illegal under FairTax. Rather, tax evasion through it is. Self-incorporate all you want, but you better be prepared to defend it.
2/23/2010 12:04:38 AM
2/23/2010 12:15:12 AM
2/23/2010 12:15:44 AM
at which point they will say "what does the HDTV have to do with you selling your labor to this company?" and you will say... exactly. A smart-ass response of "i sell my labour to my company" won't fly. so don't act like it will
2/23/2010 12:21:27 AM
Like I said, you wouldn't get the HDTV. You would get gas and food though, as well as larger ticket items, like your car or house.
2/23/2010 12:23:18 AM
and you would explain the house how? if you don't work there, it won't fly. but yes, federal employees will be blind to this ruse and just let people evade taxes
2/23/2010 12:25:04 AM
I can't think of many contracting companies that don't have offices.
2/23/2010 12:26:52 AM
offices that have beds and the like? you'd have to show that the house was actually being used for the purpose of the business, just as you have to do right now. It would be no different. Same with the car and gas. You can't drive out to vegas for the week and claim it as a business expense. That's what the AUDITS are for. Yes, the tiny bits of time you use the car for business might be covered, but once they see that you are abusing the system to begin with, they'll just say "you owe for the car too, dumbass."
2/23/2010 12:29:29 AM
2/23/2010 12:39:36 AM
2/23/2010 1:04:03 AM
2/23/2010 1:11:14 AM
how has the past 10 years changed a pet's outlook on an owner?
2/23/2010 1:32:02 AM
2/23/2010 9:39:18 AM
Do we not tax B2B transactions now? We do.Eliminating that, will lower cost of doing business in the US. Thus attracting jobs. However, when you buy something for your business that a consumer could buy, you would pay the sales tax. THat is my understanding how that works. End products.So the paper for your printers, taxed. The gas for your car, taxed. The electricity, taxed. Etc. Buying a part needed to make your product...not taxed. Doctors visits, taxed.
2/23/2010 10:33:20 AM