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Ted Cruz tax plan better than Reagan's: Art Laffer (video)
CNBC ^ | 4/15/2016 | CNBC

Posted on 04/16/2016 11:56:43 PM PDT by JediJones

Arthur Laffer of Laffer Associates reacts to presidential candidate Ted Cruz's tax plan, in which Cruz proposes individuals above certain income threshold pay a 10 percent flat tax, and a 16 percent flat tax on companies.

http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000509983

(Excerpt) Read more at video.cnbc.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Government; Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: arthurlaffer; artlaffer; cruz; laffer; laffercurve; punkmonetarist; reagan; tax; tedcruz; texas
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http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000509983
1 posted on 04/16/2016 11:56:43 PM PDT by JediJones
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To: JediJones

The 16% VAT seems unnecessarily complicated and gives a lot of incentive for businesses to evade it. It also leaves in place room for a lot of hanky panky with regards to deductions and exemptions for R&D, investments, health care, and pension contributions. It also pushes the entire burden of 16% on the wages for employees of non-profits and charities and churches where they now pay just the payroll tax of 7.65% and no income tax.

It’s good points are that it can be refunded simply at the same 16% rate for exports, and that businesses will pay taxes even if they make it look like they made no profit — which is not the case with the current Corporate Income Tax.

Likewise, the 10% single rate (not flat tax) on individuals is hampered by retaining deductions both standardized and itemized. This makes the rate higher than it would need to be without any deductions and continues the use of the tax code for social engineering purposes.

I would rather a GRT for all businesses and individuals with no deductions or exemptions or expensing for anything. Just 5% of your Gross Revenue, period. The revenue from a 5% GRT would be more than current total Federal revenues with much less incentive to evade because the rate is so low. This “Nickle Plan” would eliminate all the rigamarole from taxing.

Then do reciprocal VATs on imports — match whatever that country charges us plus any tariffs or duties it puts on American goods sold there. Credit our exports to offset the VAT charged by the country it is exported to. These two steps will encourage those countries to remove their tariffs and duties on our goods.


2 posted on 04/17/2016 2:53:56 AM PDT by Kellis91789 (We hope for a bloodless revolution, but revolution is still the goal.)
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To: JediJones

For heaven’s sakes now Ted Cruz is even better than Ronald Reagan!
When does the prideful hubris of this man ever shut up?
Go awa Ted your plan is no good just like you.


3 posted on 04/17/2016 2:59:30 AM PDT by MIA_eccl1212 (When you see a drowning liberal, throw them the anchor...)
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To: JediJones; MIA_eccl1212

A key part of the plan is to sell it on the campaign trail. Cruz failed.

Reagan wrote a popular book and clearly communicated his economic plan. Cruz might have a better plan, but his campaign needed to communicate it better before he lost on the campaign trail.

Confusion breeds fear and mistrust.


4 posted on 04/17/2016 3:08:02 AM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Obama giving away the internet: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3407691/posts)
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To: Kellis91789; Wolfie

Finally, an informed critic of the Cruz tax plan.

Now for other informed opinions ....

[quoting wolfie]

‘VATs act as an ersatz tariff on imports. Germany, for example, has a VAT that tacks on 19% to the cost of all imports. This raises the price on all imports and favors the purchase of domestic goods.’ ...

... please note, I don’t necessarily support a VAT, just a tariff that would have the same effect. The beauty of the VAT is that is bypasses trade agreements that forbid tariffs:

Approximately 160 other countries are successfully using a VAT, and the playing field will never be level until we have one, too. Because these countries use a VAT and we don’t, our exports are more expensive for them and their imports are cheaper than our domestically produced goods. This puts our factories out of business.

Germany, for example, uses a 19% VAT as a protective tariff against foreign manufacturers trying to sell to the German market. When American cars are exported from the U.S. to Germany, that 19% VAT is added to the price of the vehicle. Additionally, American companies pay an extra 19% in taxes in transportation costs, including docking, duties and insurance.

German products get rebated as they leave their home country and are not taxed upon entering the United States. This means the price of German-made products is lower, both in their home nation and here in America, than American-made goods. We must level the playing field if we want to be competitive.

— Wolfie


5 posted on 04/17/2016 3:11:33 AM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Obama giving away the internet: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3407691/posts)
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To: Kellis91789; Babwa

Kellis, you being an informed critic might find this post interesting as well:

[quoting Babwa]

Here is a better explanation of Cruz’s business tax. It replaces current 35% Corporate tax And all payroll taxes - approx. 15:

What Is Ted Cruz’s Business Flat Tax?

Ted Cruz’s “Business Flat Tax” is what most tax policy experts would call a “tax-inclusive subtraction-method value-added tax” (VAT) or a “business transfer tax” (BTT). These terms are pretty technical, so I’ll try to distill them down into something a little bit easier.

What this means, in plainer terms, is that it’s a broad tax on all kinds of income, levied on businesses and organizations. You, personally, wouldn’t have to file it for yourself. Instead, it would be taken care of at the organizational level.

That does not, of course, mean it’s free. When businesses pay taxes on people’s behalf, it still ultimately means that the government gets some money that otherwise would have gone to people. Further on, we’ll talk about who would end up losing money from the existence of this tax.

How Would It Apply To an Ordinary Business’s Income?

The starting point for a subtraction-method value-added tax is pretty simple, especially when it comes to everyday private businesses. You start with all of a business’s revenues. (Most likely, this tax would be filed on a quarterly basis.)

[Cruz avoids ‘double counting’ — very clear description here.]

However, you don’t stop there: a problem with counting all business revenues is that it ends up being a double-counting. For example, suppose you love watching Disney movies on Netflix. Netflix gets revenues from your subscription, and then it uses some of that money to pay Disney for the rights to Disney content. If we counted that money both at the Disney level and the Netflix level, we’d end up taxing the same basic product twice, merely because it involves two different companies. This is not good tax policy; that’s why modern tax systems try to avoid this.

The way the subtraction-method VAT fixes this is by, well, subtraction. Under this kind of tax system, Netflix would count all of its revenue, but then subtract the amount that it pays to other businesses, like Disney. Disney would then have to account for its own revenue and also file taxes. The result is that everything gets neatly single-counted, and nothing gets double-counted.
There’s also one other thing the tax subtracts: capital costs. That is, when Ford builds a new auto plant, it can deduct those business costs as well. This is an important aspect of the tax, and it marks a slight difference with corporate income taxes today (which also allow these costs to be deducted, but over a much more complicated schedule.)

http://taxfoundation.org/blog/ted-cruz-s-business-flat-tax-primer

— Babwa


6 posted on 04/17/2016 3:12:57 AM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Obama giving away the internet: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3407691/posts)
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To: Kellis91789; JediJones

[My own opinion ...]

While I’m a Trump supporter, we should go back to only taxing consumption:

1. We get rid of IRS tyranny on individuals.

2. Taxing businesses is also more efficient than trying to snoop into the income of every US resident.

3. LESS CORRUPTION.

Lobbying has a lot more trouble hiding in the woodwork because purchase prices are much simpler than calculating net profits.

4. We encourage savings rather than penalize income and profits.

~~~

The transition into this tax plan is what scares people. ‘Better the devil you know’, they think. If you go piecemeal, then you still have the income tax. If you go whole hog and leap from the plane, they wonder if the parachute was packed properly.

And unfortunately for Cruz, if FReepers are baffled by his plan, then he’s had a tough row to hoe on this issue.

That’s why Rubio went at him the way he did. Cruz failed to clarify his message.


7 posted on 04/17/2016 3:16:18 AM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Obama giving away the internet: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3407691/posts)
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To: Kellis91789

Taxing gross profits is the opposite of a VAT. It encourages imports since foreign companies pay no tax to us on their gross profits.

Five percent is nice and low. And very simple. I’ll give you that. But when a company is just breaking even or in the red, you kill it off.

I’m also curious about banks — they have a huge money flow but a low net profit margin. Money entrusted to them should not count as a gross profit.

But now for counter-VATs. Those are tax deductions/credits as I understand it, the very thing you seek to avoid. But if we have an income tax that is necessary to counter VATs.


8 posted on 04/17/2016 3:31:03 AM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Obama giving away the internet: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3407691/posts)
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To: JediJones

The establishment will say anything to stay in control.


9 posted on 04/17/2016 3:44:05 AM PDT by Enduro Guy (Trump/??????? 2016)
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To: Arthur Wildfire! March

The border VAT on imports and the VAT credit on exports will mitigate some of that. In the Germany example, American goods would be 19% cheaper than currently when sold there while German goods would be 19% more expensive here than currently. The American seller of the imported goods will also be paying the 5% GRT on the retail price of the product rather than the import wholesale cost. So you are effectively collecting the GRT on foreign companies’ sales revenues in America.

A GRT is a known predictable cost just as a sales tax is, without regard to whether a company is successful or not. Do businesses fail because they have to collect and pay a local sales tax ? I’m sure there are some, just as there are some that fail because they can’t afford to pay the current payroll taxes that are also due regardless of the success of the business. The GRT replaces payroll taxes as well as corporate profits taxes and individual income taxes.

Bank deposits are not “revenue” since they belong to depositors and not the bank. The GRT has nothing to do with profits or “income”; the government no longer cares what it cost you to make money, what r&d you did, how much you paid your employees or spent on benefits packages as those all fall into the category of the government somehow knowing what is “best” for a business where they have no expertise. The fees and interest collected on loans is their “revenue”. Similarly, a provision would need to be made for charities so their revenue was adjusted by the amount actually forwarded to their beneficiaries. Because the GRT replaces the Payroll tax as well as the income tax, charities are not immune just as they are not immune from Payroll tax.

Something you didn’t mention about VATs vs. GRTs is that a GRT cascades and accumulates with multiple stages of production if those are separate entities. If a product is the result of a single producer (like a self employed contractor charging for his services) or a finished good that is highly integrated, the product may have just 5% embedded tax in its retail purchase price. Something that went through a dozen stages of production or imported components would accumulate a higher embedded tax in its retail purchase price.

Avoiding this “problem” is the whole reason for the credit-invoice VAT where each stage gets credit for the VAT paid at the prior stage. This encourages evasion due to the much higher rates. It also encourages importing components and inefficient splintering of intermediate stages because there is no advantage to vertical integration in a credit-invoice VAT structure.


10 posted on 04/17/2016 4:30:40 AM PDT by Kellis91789 (We hope for a bloodless revolution, but revolution is still the goal.)
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To: MIA_eccl1212

You wouldn’t know it from the headline, but at the end Art Laffer is asked about Trump’s plan and Art is just as enthusiastic about Trump’s plan. He calls them both fantastic supply side pro-growth plans.


11 posted on 04/17/2016 4:34:03 AM PDT by Kellis91789 (We hope for a bloodless revolution, but revolution is still the goal.)
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To: JediJones

If Cruz’s tax plan is so good, why isn’t he leading it to passage in the
Senate?

This tax plan of his would be an excellent opportunity for Cruz to show
his leadership skills.

Why wait? Lead it to passage in the senate now.


12 posted on 04/17/2016 5:05:01 AM PDT by tennmountainman ("Prophet Mountainman" Predicter Of All Things RINO...for a small pittance)
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To: Kellis91789

Hi Kellis1789,

A retail consumption tax is border adjustable and eliminates the business taxes completely.

The hang up is taxing necessities vs prebating?


13 posted on 04/17/2016 5:19:40 AM PDT by Principled (...the Supreme Court of the United States favors some laws over others...)
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To: Arthur Wildfire! March
we should go back to only taxing consumption;

This is stupid. There is no consumption without production and not production without consumption. So this notion that one is immoral and should be taxed is just a scam against common sense.

Of course the real problem is a whole bunch of scams, including this one, to shift the tax burden further away from the rich. 10% on all income and 16% VAT on consumption. What a bargain for the gazillionaires.

14 posted on 04/17/2016 5:30:56 AM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: JediJones

VAT’s are a terrible idea. We do not want this camel’s nose under the tent.


15 posted on 04/17/2016 5:37:45 AM PDT by PJammers (Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?)
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To: Kellis91789
Heck the government could make it much simpler, just take all the profits and return what they decide we need.
16 posted on 04/17/2016 5:40:49 AM PDT by itsahoot (Trump is a fumble mouthed blowhard that can't finish a sentence, but he will finish a term.)
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To: Arthur Wildfire! March

But the VAT tacks the exact same 19% on all domestically produced goods.


17 posted on 04/17/2016 5:49:27 AM PDT by babble-on
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To: MIA_eccl1212

His tax plan is much better than what Reagan proposed. THe thing is Reagan had to deal with a demonrat congress and Cruz would have a pub congress that wouldn’t have anywhere to hide froma Constitutionalist President.


18 posted on 04/17/2016 6:16:17 AM PDT by Leto
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To: JediJones

Cruz was on CNBC for an hour that morning, and was very good on economic policy. Yes, Laffer opined that he thought Cruz was actually underestimating the GDP growth rates that Cruz’s plan would achieve. While Cruz is claiming his plan would produce growth rates of 4-5%, Laffer said he thought it could go as high as 6-7%.


19 posted on 04/17/2016 7:05:07 AM PDT by mtrott
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To: tennmountainman

“If Cruz’s tax plan is so good, why isn’t he leading it to passage in the
Senate?

This tax plan of his would be an excellent opportunity for Cruz to show
his leadership skills.

Why wait? Lead it to passage in the senate now.”

Surely you know that there is no way the current Senate would advance that plan, and it has nothing to do with them not liking Cruz. It wouldn’t matter which Senator pushed it. That is why you run for President, to push for a major change in the tax code.


20 posted on 04/17/2016 7:08:17 AM PDT by mtrott
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