Quote from AAAintheBeltway:
Lot of good points made in this thread. The current tax system can fairly be described as an abomination. I contend that a democracy is in trouble when nearly half the population pays nothing or next to nothing in federal income taxes. That democracy is also in trouble when even the most educated and sophisticated professionals cannot figure out their taxes on their own but are forced to hire accountants and lawyers.
So what to do? The consumption tax looks appealing on the surface, but there are a myriad of troublesome details. It is profoundly unfair to those who spent a lifetime paying taxes under the current system, but then would be forced to pay high consumption taxes during retirement, when they could least afford it.
No one has mentioned the problem of multi-level taxation. Most products go through various stages of manufacturing. Do you tax them at every level? Or do you provide a huge tax incentive for vertically integrated firms? If you tax every level,how do you capture tax on foreign manufacturing?
How about industries that are high volume, high value but low margin, like distributorships? Is it fair to tax them, or their customers, at the same rate as Microsoft and Intel , with their 50% profit margins?
Politically, there are two huge reasons a consumption tax is a non-starter. The left will never agree to the lack of progressivity. The Democrat Party has made an obsession out of opposing any tax relief because it is a "giveaway to the rich." How will this be any different?
Conservatives should fear a consumption tax even more. Why? Because there will have to be a transition period. Since the revenues from a consumtion tax will kick in gradually, we will be told that it will be necessary to continue the income tax during this transition period. With two streams of revenue to plunder, the political class will find it impossible to let one of them go and terminate the income tax. If anyone doubts this, you should reflect upon the assurances that were given when the constitutional amendment that legalized the income tax was under consideration. Voters were assured the tax would never be more than 3 or 4 %. Too bad they didn't write that into the amendment.
very astute.
The original implementation of the income tax last century was billed as a "soak the rich" program.
I would only favor the fair tax if they abolished 16th amendment.
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