HR-6169 – The Pathway to Job Creation through a Simpler, Fairer Tax Code Act

I have read HR6169 in its entirety and it is my opinion, and the opinion of others, that we should get behind HR 6169 for the following reasons:

1. HR6169 is co-sponsored by Congressman Rob Woodall. If there is any person in congress that we FairTaxers feel we can trust, it is Congressman Woodall. He has not steered us wrong, and if he is behind it, that’s good enough reason for me.

Other co-sponsors of HR-6169 include (those Bolded are also co-sponsors of HR-25):

Rep Berg, Rick [ND]
Rep Bishop, Rob [UT-1]
Rep Black, Diane [TN-6]
Rep Boustany, Charles W., Jr. [LA-7]
Rep Brady, Kevin [TX-8]
Rep Camp, Dave [MI-4]
Rep Davis, Geoff [KY-4]
Rep Gerlach, Jim [PA-6]
Rep Graves, Sam [MO-6]
Rep Herger, Wally [CA-2]
Rep Jenkins, Lynn [KS-2]
Rep Johnson, Sam [TX-3]
Rep Marchant, Kenny [TX-24]
Rep Nugent, Richard [FL-5]
Rep Reed, Tom [NY-29]
Rep Roskam, Peter J. [IL-6]
Rep Schock, Aaron [IL-18]
Rep Scott, Tim [SC-1]
Rep Sessions, Pete [TX-32]
Rep Smith, Adrian [NE-3]
Rep Tiberi, Patrick J. [OH-12]
Rep Webster, Daniel [FL-8]
Rep Woodall, Rob [GA-7]

But in case it isn’t enough for you, here are more reasons to support it:

2. HR 6169 itself is NOT a tax reform bill, but a bill to set in motion the ease of tax reform in the upcoming 113th Congress (January 2013-December 2014).

3. HR6169 will help to “fast track” tax reform bills; including, but not limited to The Fair Tax Act (HR-25) and the flat tax (HR-1040). I believe this is to prevent such things as what has been happening to the FairTax Act for the past 16 years. This bill will ensure that all future tax reform bills at least get their chance on the House and (possibly) Senate Floors.

4. The purpose of HR-6169 is to provide for enactment of comprehensive tax reform in 2013 that:

(1) protects taxpayers by creating a fairer, simpler, flatter tax code for individuals and families by (A) lowering marginal tax rates and broadening the tax base; (B) eliminating special interest loopholes; (C) reducing complexity in the tax code, making tax compliance easier and less costly; (D) repealing the Alternative Minimum Tax; (E) maintaining modern levels of progressivity so as to not overburden any one group or further erode the tax base; (F) making it easier for Americans to save; and (G) reducing the tax burdens imposed on married couples and families;

(2) is comprehensive (addressing both individual and corporate rates), so as to have the maximum economic impact by benefiting employers and their employees regardless of how a business is structured;

(3) results in tax revenue consistent with historical norms;

(4) spurs greater investment, innovation and job creation, and therefore increases economic activity and the size of the economy on a dynamic basis as compared to the current tax code; and

(5) makes American workers and businesses more competitive by (A) creating a stable, predictable tax code under which families and employers are best able to plan for the future; (B) keeping taxes on small businesses low; (C) reducing America’s corporate tax rate, which is currently the highest in the industrialized world; (D) maintaining a level of parity between individual and corporate rates to reduce economic distortions; (E) promoting innovation in the United States; (F) transitioning to a globally competitive territorial tax system; (G) minimizing the double taxation of investment and capital; and (H) reducing the impact of taxes on business decisionmaking to allow such decisions to be driven by their economic potential.

5. HR-6169 is very short and extremely easy to read. You too can read HR-6169 here in all of about 10-15 minutes: http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c112:H.R.6169:

RE: 120711: Fair Tax

UPDATE: This was my response to an article written by Peter Konetchy and posted on his (now deactivated) website. The important quotes have been highlighted below.
Here is my 1st response to: http://www.peterkonetchy.com/?page_id=871

“Proponents of the Federal Fair Tax want to replace all federal taxes with a supposedly revenue neutral 23% national sales tax”

Not “supposedly”, it truly is Revenue Neutral. Please read this study from BHI: http://FairTax.org/23

” – theoretically eliminating the IRS in the process.”

Not “theoretically”, it ACTUALLY Abolishes the IRS. It even takes the tax code a step further by removing the NEED for an IRS like agency. Federal Sales Taxes will be collected by the States. And the States will collect taxes from businesses within their state. Just like they do now with State Sales Taxes. AND, each collection point will be compensated for doing so.

Are you aware that the cost to comply with the IRS contributes to a $1 Billion annual drag on our economy; and growing every year?

The annual tax gap is estimated at roughly $430 Billion (and growing) because the Income Tax Code fails to collect taxes from anyone who fails to report income. Groups like Illegal Immigrants, Tourists, Corrupt Politicians, and the Underground Economy all escape Income Taxes – but CANNOT escape paying the Fair Tax.

“The problem is that it addresses the wrong problem with the wrong solution. The problem is not revenue collection – its spending.”

That, sir, is a matter of opinion. The Fair Tax addresses the problem of inefficient revenue collection. As mentioned above, the IRS is a $1B drag on our economy. Eliminate them and collect taxes more efficiently, and you have a system that will make up for the shortcomings of the current system.

The “Revenue Neutral” label was simply added to the Fair Tax to appease those in Congress who felt that raising more or fewer taxes was inappropriate. Once the Fair Tax is enacted, it will collect taxes from a broader tax base allowing legal US citizens the comfort of paying fewer taxes.

By the way, if you understand what the Fair Tax CAN do, you will understand that it will also address spending. It does so by eliminating 50% of lobbyists in DC; a major point of “tax breaks” for corporations.

“The solution is not to “fairly” fund our bloated government, but shrink it.”

You don’t see the elimination of the IRS as “shrinking our Government”? Again, $1B drag on our economy gone!

“Assume its proponents work diligently for the next 5- 7 years to replace all federal taxes with a revenue neutral consumption tax. What will be the state of the nation?”

Well, let’s see, in the 1st 2 years there will be an influx of corporations because the Corporate Income Tax would be ZERO PERCENT. That would bring in roughly 10 MILLION JOBS and 97% of Americans would be working again. Statistically that is FULL EMPLOYMENT. America has never seen that.

WHAT DO YOU THINK THE STATE OF THE NATION WOULD BE??

More later…

RE: Fair Tax: The Real Truth

I found another anti-FairTax blog post just rife with misconceptions and untruths that is just screaming for attention. You can read the whole blog at Redneck Democrat, but here are the highlights and my responses to each.

Neal Boortz, who has unilaterally brought the plan to some fame,  is retiring next year so the movement will likely die.  Just in case it doesn’t however, its worth explaining how it would really work, just in case someone like Mike Huckabee manage to revive this monstrousity(sic).

I guess the 70 State Representatives, 9 State Senators, 3 (recent) POTUS Candidates, and millions of grassroots Americans don’t matter. Well Neal (@Talkmaster), it’s on your shoulders now. If the #FairTax falls, it’s YOUR fault.

First off, The Fair Tax Puts All Americans On Welfare

1) The Fair Tax, although non-partisan, may be supported by some in the Tea Party, but was not created by nor is it considered “A Tea Party Bill”. Most “tea partiers” I know actually back a flat income tax (that is, until I convert them to the FairTax).

2) I think it would behoove the author to open up and understand that FairTax supporters are not all members of the Tea Party. The FairTax benefits ALL Americans regardless of party affiliation, age, race, color, creed, or wealth status. The only people the FairTax will ever be biased against are those who currently avoid or evade the current tax system; such as Illegal Immigrants, Corrupt Politicians, Drug Dealers, Prostitutes, and anyone else in the underground economy.

3) Let’s compare the FairTax prebate to something we all know and understand; the “Standard Deduction”. From Wikipedia:

The standard deduction, as defined under United States tax law, is a dollar amount that non-itemizers may subtract from their income and is based upon filing status. It is available to US citizens and resident aliens (for tax purposes) who are individuals, married persons, and heads of household and increases every year. It is not available to nonresident aliens residing in the United States.

The [prebate], as defined under [HR-25], is a dollar amount that [all legal US citizens] are eligible to receive at the beginning of each month and is [not] based upon filing status [nor income level]. It is available to US citizens and resident aliens (for tax purposes) who are individuals, married persons, and heads of household and [fluctuates] every year [based partially on the Department of Health & Human Services - poverty guideline]. It is not available to nonresident aliens residing in the United States.

In other words, the prebate will merely replace the standard deduction and all other income tax deductions that are widely accepted now. One of the biggest selling points I’ve seen for Democrats is that the prebate will completely untax the impoverished, while ensuring that the middle, upper, rich, and wealthy are all taxed accordingly.

The Fair Tax is a massive Wealth Redistributionist plan

The FairTax is NOT a “redistribution of wealth”. The money being refunded each month is the money that each of us are expected to pay in taxes on the goods and services that we require in order to survive. In other words, our “necessities”. All the FairTax will be doing is giving each person their tax money so that we are not “out of pocket” on those necessities. Spend above the poverty level for your family size and you start paying taxes like the rest of America.

What the Fair Tax does is redistribute who pays and how much they pay.

I don’t think the author fully understands that because the FairTax broadens the tax base (to those mentioned earlier) that each person will now have a much smaller tax burden. What the FairTax (actually) does is ensures tax avoiders and evaders “pay their fair share”; THAT is how it “redistribute[s] who pays and how much they pay”.

And I don’t think the author understands that income taxes are only collected from people who file income tax returns. It fails to collect taxes from those who fail to file. And the cost of hunting those tax avoiders and evaders gets put on the shoulders of the honest tax payers to the tune of $430 Billion/year. In other words, we can look at the entire income tax system as the largest “Wealth Redistributionist plan” of all. The FairTax will fix and eliminate that.

FAIR TAX TEST CASE:

I’m sure you’ve all picked up on this, but the test case is seriously flawed; the most egregious mistake being the miscalculations on the earnings/prebate. Note to Author: The annual prebate for a married couple with 2 children is $6,767 (that’s $564/mo).

So, “Tom” earns $85,000/yr. and has managed to save $10,000 of it. Way to go Tom! Or not. Because of the 7.65% payroll tax that Tom had to pay, that left the family with $78,500. But since Tom saved $10,000, they actually only spent $68,500. So, under the income tax system, they only had $68,500 and the $10,000 that went into savings was 1) taxed daily and 2) most likely used to pay taxes on the entire $85,000 by April 15th.

But in FairTax terms, that means Tom and his family had a total of ($85,000 + $6,767) = $91,767 available to them.  And under the FairTax had Tom and his family only spent the $68,500, they would have saved $23,267. Or they could have spent an extra $13,267 on luxury items and still saved the $10,000. Interestingly enough, that would have allowed Tom to pay taxes on TWO new $25,000 cars and still not have touched the original $10,000 they intended on saving.

The Fair Tax doesn’t cut spending…

You may think that it doesn’t cut spending, but think about this: Where is some of the spending done in DC? Tax deductions, Politicians and Lobbyists, right? Well, the FairTax claims to eliminate nearly 50% of lobbyists. That means eliminating loopholes, dirty politicians, and income tax deductions. And ultimately that means what (?) you got it… LESS SPENDING.

I urge you (the author and everyone else) to look at the FairTax for what it is worth, not just what you see on the face of it. If you actually open the book, you may be quite surprised.

Is there a “Fair Tax”?

You people with your “there is no fair tax” theory need to WAKE UP!! If you haven’t noticed, IT TAKES MONEY TO RUN THIS COUNTRY. And if we can’t raise the money to run this country, then we have to “fake it” by printing more money. THAT is what is ruining this Country and the American Exceptionalism that we have stood behind for over 230 years.

  • Is it fair that Illegals live in our country and use our resources w/o paying federal taxes? NO!
  • Is it fair that tourists use our resources and not pay a penny of federal tax? NO!
  • Is it fair that politicians pick winners and losers on our “tax dime”? NO!
  • Is it fair that 47% of Americans avoid or otherwise evade taxes annually? NO!
  • Is it fair that one person be taxed at a different rate than the other? NO!
  • Is it fair that we loan the gov’t money without a penny of interest in return? NO!

NOW HERE’S YOUR WAKE-UP CALL: THE FAIR TAX WILL FIX ALL THAT. So stop dickering and bickering and learn about the FairTax NOW before it’s too late!!

Start with http://FairTax.org/

Join http://FairTaxNation.org/

And check out ALL the links on the right (and on the left).

Was Mitt Romney right about the FairTax?

This paper titled “A Comparison Of Governor Romney’s Middle-Income Tax Proposals Vs. The FairTax Legislation” written by Kerry D. Bowers on 9 June 2012 will explain whether he was or not. No cheating now, I read the entire paper to find out, I expect everyone else to as well.


INTRODUCTION

During the 12 September 2011, Republican Presidential debate, Governor Romney made the following statements in response to a question about the FairTax.

“But the way the fair tax has been structured it has a real problem and that is it lowers the burden on the very highest income folks and the very lowest and raises it on middle income people. And the people who have been hurt most by the economy are the middle class. And so my plan is for middle income Americans, no tax on interest, dividends or capital gains. Let people save their money as the way they think is best. We’re taxing too much, we’re spending too much and middle income Americans need a break and I’ll give it to them.”

The claim made by Governor Romney, that the FairTax would lower the tax burden on the lowest and highest incomes while raising it on the middle-income wage earner (current tax code implied), is inconsistent with the preponderance of information that may be accessed from multiple sources comparing the FairTax with the current tax code. That being so, I will refrain from further comment on this point made by the Governor and defer to the reader to present argument to the contrary. As to the Governor’s implication that his tax proposals will be less of a burden on the middle-income earner than that anticipated with the FairTax legislation, I have not, as of this writing, discovered a study that would either directly support or discredit the Governor’s claim. Therefore, it will be the intent of this document to present the specifics of the Governor’s proposals with that of the FairTax legislation for the purpose of conducting a comparative analysis that will either substantiate or refute the Governor’s claim.

METHODOLOGY

Below, and attached in PDF format, is a spreadsheet I have prepared to facilitate an analysis of the Governor’s proposals vs. the FairTax legislation. The sheet is divided into two sections. The first section is a side-by-side comparison of the details proposed by Governor Romney vs. the details contained in the FairTax legislation. The specifics of the Governor’s proposals were obtained from his website and from other web-based media sources which reflected the same information. Where changes from the current tax code were not specifically addressed in the Governor’s proposals, I used IRS 2012 rates, deductions, exemptions, and credits to complete the comparison.

The second section of the sheet is an application example in which the specifics of the Governor’s proposals and that of the Fair Tax legislation were applied to similar conditions for a comparison of their effective tax rates. In my example, I present effective tax rate as it relates to the “sacrifice” in purchasing power as described by David G. Tuerck, PHD, who serves as the Executive Director for the Beacon Hill Institute and Chairman of the Department of Economics at Suffolk University. Dr. Tuerck, in general terms, describes sacrifice as the ratio of products surrendered to the government vs. the quantity that could have been purchased by the taxpayer were individual taxes excluded. In other words, if the taxpayer’s earned income is $50,000 and the federal income and payroll tax consequence is $10,000, then there is only $40,000 left (net income) from which 40,000 widgets, each priced $1, could be purchased from a total possibility of 50,000 widgets. The sacrifice is the 10,000 widgets that the government can purchase with the $10,000 tax revenues surrendered by the taxpayer to the government. The effective tax rate, in this case, would be the ratio of 10,000 widgets/50,000 widgets = 20%. Dr. Tuerck further describes this measure of effective tax rate as how much the government “impinges upon the taxpayer’s standard of living”, which is reduced in the foregoing example by 20%. For additional information about effective tax rates, I refer the reader to Dr. Tuerck’s BHI paper Memo To Bruce Bartlett: Do the Math.

The example I have prepared in part 2 of the sheet is based on a middle-income family consisting of 2 parents and 2 children with a combined earned income of $50,000. Given the similarity of the Governor’s proposals to that of the existing system, I was able, with appropriate changes to the tax rates, standard deduction, personal exemptions, and child tax credit, use a tax-year 2011 Form 1040 to calculate the amount of federal income taxes due. To complete the individual income-tax consequence, I added the employee Social Security tax, $3,100 (6.2% of earned income ) and another $725 (1.45% of earned income) for the Medicare tax. Not included in this filing example is the average individual tax compliance costs of approximately $182 as reported in H&R Block’s 2011 Annual Report. (It should be noted that the reported costs likely include a combination of both federal and state filing fees.) To further substantiate the impact individual compliance could have on the effective tax rate, I noted from the company’s annual report that an estimated 61% of all individual tax filers used a retail filing service in 2011. Such average compliance costs could add another 0.5% to the Governor’s effective tax rate as presented in this paper and 0% to the FairTax since no filing is required of the individual taxpayer.

To begin the process of determining the effective tax rate under the Governor’s proposals, I subtracted the applicable standard deduction, exemptions, and credits from the earned income amount to obtain the taxable income. Next, I calculated the amount of income tax due on the taxable income as determined from a 20% reduction to the 2012 marginal rates, i.e., the 10% bracket becomes 8%, 15% becomes 12%, and so on. I then calculated the employee’s share of the Social Security and Medicare taxes, which was added to the income tax to determine the total individual taxes due for this example. The sum of the combined income and payroll taxes was subtracted from the earned income amount (wages, salaries and tips) to obtain the net income, the amount of income remaining for purchases, investments or savings. In this example, 100% of the net income will be used for purchases as described by Dr. Tuerck for determining the effective tax rate.

The next step was to establish a product and price and one inclusive of embedded taxes for comparative purposes. I restricted my approach to one that I believe will present the least potential for argument from the Governor’s perspective. In this example, I chose a fictitious product (widget) with a single manufacturer and separate retailer to sell the widgets to consumers. The manufacturing costs per widget was set at $.25 (25 cents) with a 100% markup prior to distribution to the retailer, making the total manufacturing price $.50 (50 cents). The retail price was set at 100% over the manufacturing price, thus the price to the consumer is $.50 + $.50 = $1.00 (1 dollar).

Next, I focused on the embedded tax consequence to the price of the widget, which will occur partly as a result of the Governor’s intent to assess a 25% corporate tax on manufacturing and retail businesses. This cascading tax, in addition to the cascaded employer’s share of payroll taxes, 6.2% for Social Security and 1.45% for Medicare, will be embedded in the price of every widget sold to a consumer under the Governor’s proposals. In developing the widget price, I chose to use only the Governor’s corporate tax and existing employer payroll tax, because both can, within a reasonable degree of certainty, expect to be eliminated in their entirety from product and service prices soon after implementation of the FairTax and subsequent to the expiration of the transition credit and its possible effects. Other embedded taxes that exists in all products and services sold today and that will continue under the Governor’s plan, such as the existing amounts for income taxes, employee payroll taxes, and compliance costs, will arguably remain in the price of products and services under the FairTax, though differing in application and amounts. Those embedded taxes that will continue under both the FairTax and the Governor’s proposals include tariffs, duties, imposts, excises and tax code compliance costs, though compliance costs will be significantly reduced at the manufacturing level and even more so at the retail level due to the administrative credit.

To calculate the corporate tax embedded by the manufacturer, I first multiplied the manufacturer’s markup, $.025, by the suggested manufacturing EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization) of 7.9% as reported by Inc.com. The product from this equation was then multiplied by the Governor’s proposed 25% corporate tax rate. The resulting manufacturer’s embedded tax consequence was then calculated as, $0.25 x 0.079 x 0.25 ≈ $0.005 (½ cent).

The same process was accomplished for retail corporate taxes. In this case, the retailer’s $0.50 markup was multiplied by the average EBITDA for retail sales, 4.5% as reported by Inc.com. This product was then multiplied by the proposed retail corporate tax of 25%. The embedded tax consequence for retail sales was calculated from this process to be, $0.50 x 0.045 x 0.25 ≈ $0.006 (again, about ½ cent). The total embedded corporate-tax consequence is calculated as, $.005 (manufacturing) + $.006 (retail) = $.011 (about 1 cent). This $.01 is included in the widget retail sale price of $1.00.

The last embedded taxes to include in this example is the employer share for both Social Security and Medicare. To determine the appropriate amount added to the widget retail price, I had to examine what actually constitutes payroll and, of that amount, what percentage may be taxed. The percentage of gross sales that payroll can consume varies widely among manufacturing, distribution, and retail businesses, sometimes amounting to 40% and more for labor-intensive operations. For this example, I again turned to the representative measures provided by Inc.com, which reflected the percent of gross sales attributable to payroll to be 15% for manufacturing and 13% for retail. However, and as eluded to earlier, payroll is not just pay distributed to the employee but, as reported by CFO.com, includes an average of 40% attributable to benefits, leaving 60% as a representative wage and salary figure. To calculate the manufacturer’s share of payroll taxes embedded in the product price, I used, $.50 (sales) x .15 (payroll) x .60 (pay vs. benefits) x .0765 (Tax) ≈ $.003 (approx. ½ cent). The retail embedded payroll tax was figured as, $1.00 (sales) x .13 (payroll) x .60 (pay vs. benefit) x .0765 (tax) ≈ $.006 (approx. ½ cent). The total payroll tax consequence is then $.01 ( 1 cent).

As can be seen on the spreadsheet, the total embedded tax used for this example was $.02 (2 cents). The embedded tax consequence to the price was then, $.02 / $1.00 = 2% (inclusive). The product price exclusive of the embedded taxes is figured as, $1.00 – $.02 = $.98. For purposes of calculating the effective tax rate under the Governor’s plan, I used the embedded tax inclusive price of $1.00. Please note that my examples are not meant to be representative of the actual aggregate of embedded taxes in the pricing of products and services, but to serve as a standard that is well within reason for application in this one, simple, comparative example.

The last steps I used to calculate the effective tax rate under the Governor’s plan began with determining how many widgets from among a pool of 50,000 could be purchased with the remaining individual net income, $44,363 (Net) / $1.00 (Price) = 44,363 widgets. Next, I determined how many of the 50,000 widgets were sacrificed to the government as calculated by, 50,000 widgets – 44,363 widgets = 5,637 widgets. The final step in this last series of computations reveals the effective tax rate, 5,637 (government’s widgets) / 50,000 (available widgets) = 11.27%.

Turning next to the FairTax, I began the simple process of inserting the applicable elements of the legislation to calculate the net income. As can be seen, this required only 2 elements, the earned income (wages, salaries and tips) and the annual rebate amount based on family composition. The net income was then calculated by adding the two inputs, $50,000 earned income + $6,960 rebate = $56,960 net income.

Next, I calculated the widget price exclusive of the embedded taxes by removing the corporate and employer payroll taxes imposed under the Governor’s plan, $1.00 – $.02 = $.98. This remainder was then multiplied by the full 30% exclusive sales tax to calculate the amount of tax assessed on the sale of each widget, $.98 x .3 ≈ $.29. This amount, plus the widget price, is defined in the FairTax legislation as the gross amount, which, in this case, is $.98 + $.29 = $1.27. This is the price then used to calculate the effective tax rate under the FairTax. Before leaving this section, I want to emphasize again that the least arguable amount of embedded taxes were used in the Governor’s example, and the removal of these from the widget price before adding the sales tax does not detract from the intended advantage to the Governor’s proposals.

To complete the last steps in the process of determining the effective tax rate under the FairTax, I first divided the net income by the gross amount to determine how many widgets could be purchased, $56,960 / $1.27 = 44,708 widgets. Next, I subtracted the amount of widgets that can be purchased using net income from the total amount of available widgets which renders the amount sacrificed to the government, 50,000 widgets – 44,708 widgets = 5,292 widgets. Lastly, the effective tax rate equals the number of widgets sacrificed divided by the total number available, 5,292 (government widgets) / 50,000 (available widgets) = 10.58%.

RESULTS

Governor Romney’s Tax Proposals, Effective Tax Rate: 11.27%
FairTax Effective Tax Rate: 10.58%

CONCLUSIONS

Governor Romney’s implication that his tax proposals will give middle-income Americans greater tax relief than that which will result from the FairTax legislation is REFUTED.

The Governor’s tax proposals in this analysis produced an effective tax rate 6.5% greater than that of the FairTax, ((11.27% – 10.58%)/10.58%) ≈ 6.5%.

Governor Romney misrepresented the FairTax vs. the current tax rate for middle income earners as evidenced by the results of this analysis which used his proposed tax rates that are lower than those of the current tax rates.

Governor Romney’s proposals would have produced a significantly greater effective tax rate had the example focused on a self-employed filer responsible for both the employer and employee share of payroll taxes.

Had the example been exclusive to services, which may include embedded taxes of 40% or more, the gap between the Governor’s plan and the FairTax would have been significantly more pronounced in favor of the FairTax.

Had the example included all the stages of product development, from a raw resource to a final product sold at retail, the embedded tax consequence would likely have been significantly greater and further widened the gap between the Governor’s tax rate and that of the lower effective tax rate identified with the FairTax.

Were we to examine the entire range of middle-income wages, we would find the Governor’s marginal tax-rate plan to impose increasingly greater taxes on individual incomes, thus expanding the gap between the Governor’s plan and the FairTax.

Had the example allocated expenditures and distributions to items under the FairTax that are excluded from the sales tax, such as education, job training, gift distributions, and investment purchases, among others, the division between the Governor’s rate and that of the FairTax would have further widened.

Governor Romney’s tax plan, with its similarity to the existing income, payroll, and corporate tax system, will likely retain the same breadth of problems, inefficiencies and ineffectiveness identified with the current system.

Lastly, the Governor’s plan, as evidenced and reasonably assumed from the first part of the chart, will unlikely achieve any of the 7 requisites identified for an effective tax system – Simple, Fair, Neutral (no impact on business decisions), Visible, Stable (requiring infrequent changes), Efficient, and Fosters Economic Growth.

Kerry D. Bowers
9 June 2012

What changed your mind?

Regardless of whether you’re a Democrat or Republican, a Liberal or Conservative, or a Left- or Right-winger, if you didn’t initially like the FairTax, what changed your mind? What was the ultimate turning point that made you see the FairTax in a different light? Where was the epiphany?

I’ve heard some say that it was their view on Corporate Welfare that did it. I’ve heard others say that it is the progressivity that the “Prebate” adds. I’ve even been told that it is the “socialistic” quality that it brings by completely untaxing the poor.

I would like to know if there are other progressive characteristics so that we can try to help others see them. The FairTax is a non-partisan bill that needs the support of people from both sides of the aisle. As long as it is viewed as a “Republican Bill” then it will continue to sit on the desks of our House members.

Please contact YOUR congressmen right now and let them know you support the FairTax and that you want them to also.

POPVOX, HR-25: https://www.popvox.com/bills/us/112/hr25
POPVOX, S-13: https://www.popvox.com/bills/us/112/s13

Guest Post: Is the Fair Tax really going to be fair for boosting America’s future?

UPDATE: I have edited the FairTax information to reflect what is in Congress as of April 2013

Below is a guest post from someone who is more of an Income Tax thinker, than a FairTax thinker. I picked this post up because I wanted to help educate the individual on the FairTax; and because he seems genuinely willing to learn. I will leave my comments below and I hope others do too. After all, if we are going to educate people on something, should we not be educated on the subject as well?  ~Robert Williams


Is the Fair Tax really going to be fair for boosting America’s future?

Are you someone who thought that the Flat Tax was a brilliant idea that failed? If answered yes, you’re probably going to love the Fair Tax. The Fair Tax is the “let’s dump the Tax code” idea from the Congress that plans to abolish all death taxes, federal income taxes, capital profit taxes and payroll taxes to replace it with a national retail sales tax. A group, well known as the Americans for Fair Taxation introduced the Fair Tax Act of 2003 that would call off all the aforementioned taxes and replace it with a single tax of 23% that will be administered by the present sales tax authorities.

Don’t you think that a flat 23% tax would have a drastic detrimental impact on the poor people? Yes, due to this gross indiscrimination the Fair Tax Act proposes the poor people to pay a rebate that is equivalent to 23% of the poverty level. As per the Department of Health and Human Services, the guideline for poverty for a family of 4 in 2008 was around $21,200 and this means that a poor family with 4 people will receive a check of $525 a month in order to be able to cover the costs of the sales tax.

Is the Fair Tax really fair for the American economy?

As per Linder, an economist, the Fair Tax momentum continues to build fast and this means that this particular Act is gradually gaining the support of the lawmakers. The bill now has 21 co-sponsors and all of them represent a bipartisan coalition of members throughout the nation. However, according to Linder, the present tax code highly violates the principle of equality as special rates for the special circumstances actually violate the original Constitution and therefore it is unfair. But after the implementation of the Fair Tax Act, each and every tax payer will require paying the same rate and will also require controlling their liability through their expenses. The tax paid by an individual will entirely depend on the lifestyle that he spends as the more money you spend, the more tax you’ll have to pay.

Advantages of the Fair Tax Act and studies that are in favor of it

Well, the most obvious advantage of the Fair Tax Act is the removal of the annual income tax headache and the cost that you have to pay to the tax preparers. By eliminating the Internal Revenue Service, government spending would also be reduced and some other proponents even argue that an increase in consumer spending would lead to an improved GDP, wages and productivity of jobs.

Without closely determining the assumptions and the calculations of each study about the pros and cons of the Fair Tax Act, it is tough to understand the way in which the Fair Tax Act will impact the US economy. If this Act is ever passed in the nation, the implementation has to be slow enough so that the performance can be easily evaluated. A gradual and slow shift from income taxes to the fair tax would be the best way out. A huge and fast change may make this entire plan unworkable.

Jason Holmes is a regular writer with Debt Consolidation Care and is also a contributory writer with other financial sites. His expertise is woven around various aspects of the debt industry and with his e-books he tries to impart to people the different situations and simple solutions to get out of difficult situations. Some of his works include e-books like ‘Credit Score The Quintessential Therapy for a Happy Pocket’, Take Creditors and Collection Agencies to Small Claims Court’ and, My Story- From Depression To a Smile’. Follow us on: http://www.facebook.com/debtconsolidationcare


MY RESPONSES:

To answer your two primary questions: YES and YES. If  those two answers weren’t clear enough after you read the Bill, then you don’t know the FairTax as well as you think you do.

1. Jason says: “Are you someone who thought that the Flat Tax was a brilliant idea that failed? NO! And I can almost assure you that most people who are FairTax supporters now, understand why a flat tax system was (and still is) a HORRIBLE IDEA; the main reason being a flat tax is still a tax on income. That means it leaves in place the IRS, the Capital Gains taxes, estate taxes, and a number of other mechanisms that the FairTax eliminates.

2. Jason says: “The Fair Tax is the “let’s dump the Tax code” idea from the Congress that plans to abolish all death taxes, federal income taxes, capital profit taxes and payroll taxesWRONG! The FairTax is NOT from Congress. It is a Bill in Congress that was adopted by a couple of Congressmen interested in bettering America. But it was NOT written, created, or even crafted by Congress. The FairTax is a product of 5 businessmen from Houston, TX who were fed up with trying to reduce their taxes and not enough time trying to grow their businesses.

3. Jason says: “…introduced the Fair Tax Act of 2003“. Actually, the FairTax was created in 1995 and debuted in the 106th Congress in 1999. It has been in every session of Congress since then and continues to pick up momentum. The current bill is named “The Fair Tax Act of 2013″, is number HR-25 in the house, and S-122 in the Senate. It also has a companion bill that will repeal the 16th Amendment to the US Constitution named HJ Res 16.

4. Jason says: “Don’t you think that a flat 23% tax would have a drastic detrimental impact on the poor people?Can we back up a couple of lines? As you stated previously (I copied it into my response #2), The FairTax “plans to abolish all death taxes, federal income taxes, capital profit taxes and payroll taxes“. So does it make sense to you that replacing all those taxes (and more) with a 23% consumption tax would ADD a 23% burden to poor people?

It doesn’t make sense to me at all, here’s why: The vast majority of poor people work for a living. They earn a paycheck from an employer who is required by law to take an remit certain taxes to the federal government. Depending on the wages being earned, that could be 10% or 15% for the income tax and another 7.65% for the payroll tax. If those taxes are no longer being taken from them, then they have received an immediate payraise of 17.65% to 22.65%. That right there is more spending power in their pockets immediately. On top of that, the FairTax advances us on all of the taxes we pay, based on the Dept. of Health and Human Services National Poverty Guideline (NPG). So, a family of 4 (this is an average household in America) will receive an additional $564/mo to help them OUT of poverty. So I hope Jason sees where his statement is incorrect.

5. Jason says: “As per the Department of Health and Human Services, the guideline for poverty for a family of 4 in 2008 was around $21,200 and this means that a poor family with 4 people will receive a check of $525 a month in order to be able to cover the costs of the sales tax.That is partially correct. Let me explain. First, your numbers are a little off, but I understand where you’re going. As you read in my last comment the number has increased with the fluctuating economy. It will continue to do so after the FairTax, but in the opposite direction. As the economy gets better, the poverty guideline will lower, ultimately reducing the amount of money shelled out to lower-income families.

Second, that value IS the amount of taxes that a family of 4 spending AT the poverty level would spend. In 2011, the Family Consumption Allowance for a family of 4 was $29,420. Multiply that by the FairTax rate of 23% and you get $6,766. Divide that by 12 and you get $564/month. You can do this with any family size. As you can see, the FairTax UNTAXES every legal, registered, US family up to the National Poverty Guideline. So does it make sense for anyone to say that the FairTax only helps those spending less than $15,000? No, it doesn’t.

Jason says: “The bill now has 21 co-sponsors and all of them represent a bipartisan coalition of members throughout the nation.I think you’re reading the wrong version of the Bill entirely. The current version of HR-25 can be found here and now has 63 Co-Sponsors (and the 1 Sponsor). The Senate version, S-122 can also be found here and has 7 co-sponsors (plus the 1 Sponsor); which gives us a total of 72 supporters in Congress; the HIGHEST number of initial co-sponsors in its history.

Jason says: “If this Act is ever passed in the nation, the implementation has to be slow enough so that the performance can be easily evaluated. A gradual and slow shift from income taxes to the fair tax would be the best way out. A huge and fast change may make this entire plan unworkable.I disagree with that 100%. I hope others who disagree will also voice exactly why they do so. A “gradual and slow shift from income taxes” would mean that something is left in place. If we leave anything in place for our corrupt politicians to toy and tinker with, they are going to screw something up. We DO NOT want to give Congress the power to tax us on both our income and on consumption. They can already do that now IF THEY WANT TO. The reason they aren’t is because it would be political suicide to even suggest anything like that. However, if we HAND them that ability, by allowing them a “gradual and slow shift from income taxes”, then there is no way we will have a completed process….E-VER! What we need to do is follow the FairTax, AS WRITTEN! The FairTax will immediately rip out ALL of the income tax code, rules, and regulations. It will switch to a consumption tax system on 1/1/20xx of the year following its passage, and it will then set in motion to abolish the IRS within 3 years. Over $22,000,000 went into the research of what the FairTax is, what it will do, and how it will work. Let’s not screw it up by handing Congress the keys to the Lamborghini.

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