I stole this from another message board, but I thought it was well put:
11/28/2010 12:13:14 PM
11/28/2010 12:18:14 PM
fairtax is not progressive because it shifts the burden to the poor, they spend a higher proportion of their income on the fairtaxthe fairtax being far idea is based on the fallacy that there is a linear relationship between wealth and what people spend on stuff[Edited on November 28, 2010 at 12:22 PM. Reason : .][Edited on November 28, 2010 at 12:34 PM. Reason : typing fast]
11/28/2010 12:21:05 PM
learn the difference between "progressive" and "regressive," buddy.btw, that post isn't an argument for a progressive tax structure. it's an argument for the rich paying more money in taxes than the poor, which is easily achieved by a flat-rate-tax. /thread^and your fallacy is in assuming that money won't eventually be spent, and thus be taxed at the exact same rate. what you are essentially saying is that it is unfair for people to be able to save money]
11/28/2010 12:23:46 PM
11/28/2010 12:26:15 PM
11/28/2010 12:42:26 PM
It seems like an argument for the rich to pay a higher rate, not the poor paying a higher rate, which is what a flat tax is. It seems like an argument for the rich to pay a higher rate, not the poor paying a higher rate, which is what a flat tax is.[Edited on November 28, 2010 at 1:06 PM. Reason : this]
11/28/2010 1:06:41 PM
It would be in effect, as we would have other regressive taxes.
11/28/2010 1:23:33 PM
11/28/2010 1:34:01 PM
Having progressive effects != progressive taxation. In addition you didn't address how the flat nature of the rebat shifts the tax burden to the lower middle class. Here is a chart ive used before to illustrate:
11/28/2010 2:28:23 PM
Your chart sucks. Once again, taxes do not have to be tied to income in order to craft a progressive taxation system.
11/28/2010 2:41:48 PM
11/28/2010 6:57:02 PM
11/28/2010 7:16:21 PM
In a dramatically poorer society, the rich would live pretty much the same way they do now. Just compare our rich to the rich of lesser states in South America: life-styles are pretty much the same. A house bigger than they could ever use, a fancy car, jewelry, servants, frequent travel, etc. What changes, however, is the life-style of the middle-class and poor. They lose their air-conditioned home, they lose the car, they lose the internet/cableTV/cell phone, the list goes on. It seems to me, if anyone should be desperate to sustain the productivity enhancement of the capitalist system, it should be the poor and middle-class, as it is they that have the most to lose.
11/28/2010 7:18:55 PM
11/28/2010 7:19:32 PM
wait, not having a disproportionate amount of your income taken away is now a reward?
11/28/2010 8:11:35 PM
wait, not having a disproportionate amount of income is now a reward?
11/28/2010 8:48:07 PM
11/28/2010 8:58:53 PM
11/28/2010 9:21:38 PM
One of the problems with the OP is that it assumes that the wealthy business owners are the only ones (or at least the majority of the ones) who benefit from average people learning in public schools/driving to work on public roads/et cetera. An average person benefits from having a job just as much as the CEO benefits from having them as an employee. I never understood why people in general have the idea that a mutually agreed upon contract is somehow always more beneficial to the "big guy", and leaves the "little guy" out to dry.That said, the FairTax has too many problems. With that said, I'll take it if it means no more income tax.[Edited on November 28, 2010 at 9:27 PM. Reason : forgot words]
11/28/2010 9:27:06 PM
I agree with aaronburro and theDuke866 with the Flat Tax. It's something I've been in favor of for years, before I knew there were countries that implemented a Flat Tax or that we have politicians who are in favor of it.I understand the reasoning behind the progressive tax, and it's unlikely that a flat tax will be implemented any time soon, but I just can't agree with the progressive tax system in which the rich are taxed more simply because they make more. The argument in the OP is that the rich should be taxed more because they make use of the utilities more than that of poorer folk. But the fact is, even with a flat tax, they will still pay more than the poorer folk.I agree with aaronburro's assessment that the money will be spent.I'm still try to get what the hell Kris is trying to say against a flat tax. If everyone is being taxed 30%, what's the problem? Yeah, the poor people will still have less money. But I don't think a tax system should be set up in some Robin Hood setup, where everyone makes the same amount of money. If this is the case that anyone supports, then our current system does a shit job of it.It seems like everyone is trying to come up with a way to get more money out of rich people while trying to be fair about it. I suppose a "fair" tax is a decent way to go, but it's not fair when you start getting rebates or whatever the fuck they'll do so that an astronomically high sales tax doesn't make necessities, or every little "luxury" and put it out of reach of the poor.If you want more money out of rich people, I would appreciate it if people would just come out and say it, instead of trying to come up with some convoluted system that doesn't directly take more money from rich people, but the end result has rich people paying more than anyone else.
11/28/2010 10:29:30 PM
11/28/2010 10:42:08 PM
just think of how many IRS agents, HnR Block employees, lawyers, and accountants would become unemployed if everyone was just taxed 40% or some other stable known number.
11/28/2010 10:45:21 PM
11/28/2010 11:22:09 PM
11/28/2010 11:28:36 PM
^^ Or how many IRS agents could be fired if half the population went un-taxed. It seems to me, it is revenue maximizing to not tax the poorest among us, as they are least likely to pay on time and we don't get much out of them, so it should cost more to tax them than than what they wind up paying. Well, this position scales. As such, I say go ahead, give in to the progressive tax code, and declare half the population no longer needs to file tax returns. Then, at least some of us can enjoy income privacy. [Edited on November 28, 2010 at 11:32 PM. Reason : .,.]
11/28/2010 11:31:18 PM
11/28/2010 11:34:24 PM
11/28/2010 11:44:23 PM
A pole tax is awesome because it eliminates any effects from tax avoidance behavior. Tax everyone $20k a year. The more you pay, the less of next year must be spent behind bars.
11/28/2010 11:47:59 PM
11/29/2010 12:07:23 AM
The most recently legislated poll tax I can think of was Great Britain in 1990. And both will grow the money supply. A given stock of money can move faster, or a greater stock of money can move the current rate, both would have the same effect.
11/29/2010 12:56:10 AM
Wrong, one increases supply, the other increases demand.
11/29/2010 11:19:02 PM
Increases supply of what and demand for what? Increasing monetary velocity leads to inflation if not countered, just as increasing monetary supply leads to inflation if not countered.
11/29/2010 11:50:15 PM
A person with enough capital to meaningfully trade stocks and bonds can earn 90% of their yearly income without breaking a sweat. When you have more money, it's easier to make more money (remember "You have to spend money to make money"?). It's a situation where the whole is greater than the sum of its parts, money is increasingly self-generative as it grows. This is facilitated by the economic infrastructure that the entire population works together to maintain. The more money you're making, the more dependent your wealth is on the populace as a whole maintaining the institutions.Mostly restating the original post, but it goes beyond roads and sewer systems. The higher you go, especially with stocks, bonds, and other capital investments, the less "earning" is done by the earner and instead is a manifestation of collective production. Wisely predicting which stock is going to rise is not "work", it's vampirism, and a higher portion of that ought to go back to the society-at-large which maintains that rising level of production.
11/30/2010 2:49:15 PM
11/30/2010 3:30:39 PM
11/30/2010 4:26:33 PM
And as far as the value of investments go, there's no guarantee that the benefits will trickle down. Someone may invest in a company so the board of directors can buy machines to replace half of their workforce and increase productivity, and put the saved money and increased returns into CEO coffers. Profits are up, so the stock rises, and the investor makes out like a bandit because he put people out of work and lined his wealthy friends' pockets. The "value" that you claim investors make to society is a highly, highly idealized one and is not nearly as guaranteed as the value reaped by the investors and board of directors. Further, when that company goes under, the board and the investors are likely all insulated from those effects because of wealth they've stockpiled through the company's growth, while the workforce is out of a job entirely. Trying to paint investors as benevolent guiders of industry who risk it all to help create jobs is just laughable, every move they make is hedged, and the interests of society and the people at the bottom is the absolute last thing on their mind. Every single person knows this to be true but some people cling to a mythology that if we make sacrifices (tax cuts) to the gods (wealthy) they'll reward us with a bountiful harvest (jobs). We've been sticking with tax rates close to Reagan's for 30 years now, and the income gap has only grown (and is growing at an increasing steepness). Face it, they're spending the saved money on assembly lines and sweatshops in East Asia, not jobs or public works, and the only thing that trickles down to the middle and lower classes is piss.Maybe Adam Smith can say it better in The Wealth of Nations
11/30/2010 4:51:19 PM
progressive property taxes would be a far more fair and enforcable tax system than income.[Edited on November 30, 2010 at 5:09 PM. Reason : .]
11/30/2010 5:09:05 PM
What about taxing illegal sources of incomes, black markets, drug trades, etc? FairTax or a Federal Sales Tax that replaces the traditional income tax would capture this income at the time the money was spent.What about international tourism dollars? How many billions would that add to the tax base under the same schema?Is progressiveness or regressiveness defined by the AMOUNT of taxes you pay or the rate at which you pay taxes. If you decide that point the discussion is moot.[Edited on November 30, 2010 at 6:04 PM. Reason : .]
11/30/2010 6:03:22 PM
11/30/2010 6:32:47 PM
11/30/2010 6:42:32 PM
11/30/2010 6:46:04 PM
the only thing prgoressive income taxes stimulate is the creative finance economy
11/30/2010 6:50:17 PM
11/30/2010 7:09:27 PM
11/30/2010 9:40:59 PM
11/30/2010 9:42:02 PM
11/30/2010 10:00:48 PM
11/30/2010 10:08:13 PM
MPC is marginal propensity to consume. Each additional dollar you make, you spend less of. The idea works out something like this, you need to collect $10 in taxes. If you take that $10 from a poor man, you prevent him from putting $9 of it into circulation in the economy. If you take that $10 from a rich man, you only prevent him from putting $1 of it into circulation in the economy. That's the idea, but that's only one smaller part of it, and it's really only valuable during a recession, the automatic stabilizer is the much more effective and beneficial part of it. That works like so: as the economy is doing poorly and incomes drop, tax rate drops, as the economy is doing better and incomes rise, tax rate rises. This assists in stabilizing the economy to some degree and helps to soften recessions and such.
11/30/2010 10:20:22 PM
I know what MPC is. Maybe I should go back and read more of the thread but you seemed to imply a generic taxing of the rich would stimulate the economy...did you mean to say "taxing the rich during good times such that you can spend that money during recessions will stimulate the economy"?
11/30/2010 10:26:27 PM