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Fair Tax, Flawed Tax
OpinionJournal.com ^ | August 26, 2007 | BRUCE BARTLETT

Posted on 08/25/2007 9:11:11 PM PDT by gpapa

Does adding 30% to the price of every house sold sound like a good idea to you?

Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee's unexpectedly strong second-place showing in the recent Iowa Republican straw poll is widely attributed to his support for the FairTax.

For those who never heard about it, the FairTax is a national retail sales tax that would replace the entire current federal tax system. It was originally devised by the Church of Scientology in the early 1990s as a way to get rid of the Internal Revenue Service, with which the church was then at war (at the time the IRS refused to recognize it as a legitimate religion). The Scientologists' idea was that since almost all states have sales taxes, replacing federal taxes with the same sort of tax would allow them to collect the federal government's revenue and thereby get rid of their hated enemy, the IRS.

Rep. John Linder (R., Ga.) and Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R., Ga.) have introduced legislation (H.R. 25/S. 1025) to implement the FairTax. They assert that a rate of 23% would be sufficient to replace federal individual and corporate income taxes as well as payroll and estate taxes. Mr. Linder's Web site claims that U.S. gross domestic product will rise 10.5% the first year after enactment, exports will grow by 26%, and real investment spending will increase an astonishing 76%.

(Excerpt) Read more at opinionjournal.com ...


TOPICS: Editorial; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: fairness; fairtax; tax; taxes
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1 posted on 08/25/2007 9:11:12 PM PDT by gpapa
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To: gpapa

Oops! Bartlett forgot to mention that the embedded income tax costs in the items he mentioned will be gone.

That dramatically changes the economic model.

The fact that he would gloss over this CRITICAL fact demonstrates that his analysis is flawed poop.


2 posted on 08/25/2007 9:22:12 PM PDT by taxcutisapayraise
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To: SittinYonder; Toddsterpatriot; 1rudeboy

Ping of interest.


3 posted on 08/25/2007 9:24:13 PM PDT by Ultra Sonic 007 (Look at all the candidates. Choose who you think is best. Choose wisely in 2008.)
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To: gpapa

Bartlett begins by saying that the FT would add a 30% tax on top of the price already paid for goods. His example states that an item that costs a dollar now would cost $1.30 under the FT. Most of the rest of his article follows from this.

He’s wrong and I can only assume he hasn’t actually read the FT book or, better, the bill. Maybe he’s working for a lobby with an interest against the FT. In any event, he’s wrong.


4 posted on 08/25/2007 9:27:19 PM PDT by navyguy (Some days you are the pidgeon, some days you are the statue.)
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To: taxcutisapayraise

That is exactly right. People don’t realize the amount of invisible tax they pay in increased costs.


5 posted on 08/25/2007 9:27:30 PM PDT by Maelstorm (When ideas are considered equal regardless of content, then arriving at truth becomes an accident.)
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To: navyguy

It isn’t that he doesn’t know what the FT is. It is he is opposed to it because it would sweep away the current tax system.


6 posted on 08/25/2007 9:28:44 PM PDT by Maelstorm (When ideas are considered equal regardless of content, then arriving at truth becomes an accident.)
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To: pissant; Duncan Hunter Ambassador; Calpernia; DH4Pres08; Ultra Sonic 007

PING


7 posted on 08/25/2007 9:29:33 PM PDT by Paperdoll ( Duncan Hunter '08)
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To: gpapa

The 30% or Whatever the rate would be is already added into everything anyway. That’s how economics works. This is a change in HOW it is collected and WHO pays the bulk of it. But nothing will cost more in actual money and likely will cost far LESS in the long run.

= )


8 posted on 08/25/2007 9:34:43 PM PDT by RachelFaith (Doing NOTHING... about the illegals already here IS Amnesty !!)
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To: RobFromGa

Ping


9 posted on 08/25/2007 9:35:15 PM PDT by gpapa
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To: Maelstorm

Right, but why is he opposed to getting rid of the current tax system?


10 posted on 08/25/2007 9:37:58 PM PDT by navyguy (Some days you are the pidgeon, some days you are the statue.)
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To: Maelstorm

Not everyone seeing flaws in the proposed “fair tax” desire to see the IRS and current income tax remain.

As I have said many times in many discussions, the answer isn’t in how we change the manner of tax collection, it is getting out of control spending in check.

Any tax reform that doesn’t do anything to curb the outrageous way money is spent in D.C. is worthless, even if it ultimately eleminates the IRS.

As long as they are collecting the money, politicans will find ways to spend it to buy votes to remain in power and seek even more.

We desperatley need tax reform, but first there has to be a curb on out of control federal spending.


11 posted on 08/25/2007 9:40:40 PM PDT by DakotaRed (Liberals don't rattle sabers, they wave white flags)
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To: gpapa

How about No one pays taxes who makes less than 250,000.00 a year and then you pay 50%?

that ought to fix Pelosi, Heinz, Clintoons,
Edwards, and company


12 posted on 08/25/2007 9:42:41 PM PDT by television is just wrong (deport all illegal aliens NOW. Put all AMERICANS TO WORK FIRST. END WELFARE.)
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To: gpapa

How does this compare to a flat tax of 17%?


13 posted on 08/25/2007 9:43:41 PM PDT by RC2
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To: gpapa
uncle neal is going to have fun with this monday morning.

http://www.fairtax.org/

14 posted on 08/25/2007 9:46:27 PM PDT by JohnLongIsland
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To: gpapa

Bartlett has been trashing the Fair Tax from Day One. I’m pretty sure the guy is tight with Dick Armey and is pushing for Armey’s flat INCOME tax which, like the current income tax was once a cute little monkey that grew into the monster we suffer under today.


15 posted on 08/25/2007 9:46:46 PM PDT by Dick Bachert
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To: gpapa

I always liked the idea of a National Sales Tax to get at the illegal monies made in this country from the various illicit activities. Drug dealers, pimps and bookies do not file with the IRS but they do buy. Now you have access to those dollars that otherwise go unreported.


16 posted on 08/25/2007 9:47:11 PM PDT by Edison (I don't know what irks me more, the lying or the incompetence.)
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To: television is just wrong

The rich will simply move their money into tax free bonds to avoid losing more of their money to taxes or hide it in good quality stocks and never sell it. The first thing will happen is Wall Street will slowdown (cities like Chicago, San Francisco and New York will feel its effect) because less stocks will be sold for profit and less money will flow as all of it is hidden in tax free bonds. Only the bond businesss will do well, everyone else will slowdown. Ironicly the cities affected are in blue states (IL, CA, NY). The key thing to government finances (lesson learned in NJ) is not tax increase or tax reduction, but curbing government spending. NJ did both (increase and reduction) and she is really in a financial hole. NJ may be the first state in the union to go bankrupt within ten years. She has a $ 5 billion annual deficit plus a $ 58 billion shortfall in her health insurance fund for state workers and teachers. If NJ fired all their state workers they could not close the annual budget gap. The health fund shortage was caused by the state when they stop funding the fund in 1994 due to other pressing spending needs. Result is the fund is short and by law this is a contract between the state and the state workers that cannot be brokened (unlike federal social security which is not a contract but a legislative entitlement). If the state cannot raise the taxes it can declare bankruptcy to avoid the contract obligations. My town tax assessor told me that my property tax could rise 12 percent just to cover the initial payments for the state worker/teacher health fund shortfalls.


17 posted on 08/25/2007 10:18:03 PM PDT by Fee (An American empire can only be built by leaders with the stomach of Romans.)
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To: Fee

well, then there is no such thing as a fair tax.


18 posted on 08/25/2007 10:22:32 PM PDT by television is just wrong (deport all illegal aliens NOW. Put all AMERICANS TO WORK FIRST. END WELFARE.)
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To: gpapa

The idea of a national sales tax has been around long before Scientolgy. Bartlett bringing this up first in the article is a scare tactic and poisons any good argument he might be making afterwards. We’re not stupid, you know.


19 posted on 08/25/2007 10:42:15 PM PDT by KingKenrod
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To: navyguy
Bartlett begins by saying that the FT would add a 30% tax on top of the price already paid for goods. His example states that an item that costs a dollar now would cost $1.30 under the FT. Most of the rest of his article follows from this.

He’s wrong and I can only assume he hasn’t actually read the FT book or, better, the bill.

The bill doesn't say anything about prices. The bill is written for the business that would be subject to the tax, not the consumer. The tax (for the first year) is "23%of the gross payments".

IOW, the business would add up their gross payments (gross payments would have to include other taxes) and remit 23%.

For a business to be able to remit 23% of their gross income and not come out broke as a result, they'd have to add 30% to their prices to cover their new tax.

$0.30 tax OF $1.30 after tax price is 23%...

20 posted on 08/25/2007 11:56:22 PM PDT by lewislynn (What does the global warming movement and the Fairtax movement have in common? Disinformation)
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