Thursday, December 27, 2007

FAIRTAX FACTS BY LEO LINBECK, CEO AND CO-FOUNDER OF AMERICANS FOR FAIR TAXATION

The following is an e-mail sent to us FairTax Volunteers and I thought I would pass it on. It is lengthy, but a good read and encompasses much of the FairTax Facts. I will leave it up the rest of the week so you can pop in and read a bit every day if it is too long for you.

Meanwhile, I am struggling with my year-end bookwork, getting ready for tax-time. Good grief - what do people see in this present income tax system? What a waste of our good time. Well, here's the good stuff:

COMMENTARY - FairTax Facts By LEO LINBECK, December 26, 2007; Page A10, Wall Street Journal.

Much has been written lately about the FairTax, the proposal to replace the current federal income tax with a national retail sales tax. Unfortunately, much of it is wrong. This country needs a spirited and wide-ranging debate about fundamental tax reform. But that debate is not advanced by misimpressions and distortions of the FairTax. Let us then clear up a few.

One assertion about the FairTax is that it began as a project of the Church of Scientology at a time when it was seeking tax-exempt status. This is false. The FairTax actually comes to us from market research conducted more than a decade ago by a handful of business leaders. Their goal was to determine what type of tax system would be most acceptable to the American public. The studies they paid for cost millions of dollars, included hard economic research by respected scholars, and were subjected to critical peer review.

The result is a proposal, since introduced as legislation in Congress, now known as the FairTax. What emerged from this research is that a national retail sales tax is a preferred method of taxation among most Americans surveyed. Another is that the tax would have significant benefits for the nation's economy. Why? Because it eliminates income taxes and payroll taxes (for Social Security and Medicare), which are costly to collect and end up as "embedded" in the price of everything we buy.

Along with getting rid of the Internal Revenue Service and the complexities of the income tax code, the FairTax would eliminate the distorting effect that income and payroll taxes have on the economy. Research on the price of consumer goods reveals that up to 20% of all prices today represent hidden income taxes and payroll taxes. Once these taxes are repealed and replaced with the FairTax, it is likely that market pressure would force retail prices to fall.

Eliminating embedded taxes will also do something else -- it will remove significant price disadvantages suffered by American producers competing with tax-free imports. Eliminating corporate income taxes and capital gains taxes, which the FairTax would do, would likely make the American economy the most desirable place in the world to do business.

Another benefit of the FairTax is that, unlike other sales taxes, it would not hit the poorest Americans the hardest. The FairTax proposal calls for sending every American a "prebate" check to offset the cost of the national sales taxes paid by those living in poverty. This feature would effectively exempt those living below the poverty line from paying taxes to the federal government, and provide all taxpayers with a reimbursement of a portion of taxes paid.

The FairTax rate is 23% on retail sales when calculated "inclusively," as are income tax rates. It will, in a fairer, more transparent and less-expensive way, raise the same amount of money the federal government now collects through the income and payroll taxes. Because it would be levied on consumption at the final point of sale, instead of on earnings, it would dramatically expand the tax base.

The FairTax would collect revenue from the underground economy. Even illegal immigrants and the 40 million foreign tourists who visit the U.S. each year would pay it. The distributional effects of the FairTax have been extensively studied, and although the proposal has distinct advantages for investors and wealth creation across the income spectrum, the greatest benefit of the FairTax is to low- and moderate-income Americans.

The effect of eliminating regressive payroll taxes is commonly overlooked when analyzing the FairTax, but it would have a very significant impact, as these taxes represent the single largest tax burden on these income earners. Significantly, the FairTax eliminates all loopholes, gimmicks, exemptions and deductions from the federal tax system. Under the FairTax, Congress would no longer be able to reward friends, punish enemies or manipulate behavior through the tax code.

The FairTax would also eliminate the lucrative tax lobbying practices that represent more than 50% of all lobby dollars spent annually in Washington. It's no surprise, then, to see that vested interests have argued against the FairTax and in favor of keeping the mortgage interest deduction. But wouldn't it be better for everyone to stop the IRS from withholding from paychecks; to see the price of new homes -- and all other goods -- drop by removing embedded costs; and to have interest rates fall as the savings rate increases?

Is it really in everyone's interests to keep the income-tax system so that one-third of taxpayers can go on deducting a portion of their mortgage interest from their federal taxes? There have been many tax reform proposals over the years, but most of them simply call for reforming around the margins of the existing tax system.

The President's Advisory Panel on Tax Reform was assembled by the Bush administration and concluded its work a few years ago. Instead of seriously looking at the FairTax, the panel looked at a very different type of consumption tax, riddled with exemptions, and then declared that it would be too expensive and that the rate would have to be far higher than the FairTax rate.

Politically, the FairTax will only become law once enough citizens demand that it be enacted, overcoming the self-interest that members of Congress and others have in holding onto the current system. It is debatable whether a modern, citizen-led tax revolution is possible. But the growing popularity (even among presidential candidates) of the FairTax suggests that another Boston Tea Party may be at hand.

Mr. Linbeck is CEO and cofounder of Americans for Fair Taxation.

If you agree with the idea of the FairTax, go to my link on signing the petition and DO IT. We need all the support we can get to get our congressmen to listen to us instead of the lobbyists.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Those who have gained and continue
to hold positions of power by virtue of corruption will always
strive to avert exposure by opposing any measure that would
remove them from power. Right?

Anonymous said...

Right! And it is our responsibility to stop this corruption. The demise of the income tax is a good place to start. It will certainly expose the corrupt, frantically treading water backwards.

BettyW said...

Hi Bobbie,
To quote your, "Good grief - what do people see in this present income tax system?" I see tax evasion, lobby favors, falsified tax returns, and a host of dishonesty indirectly, but related to individual income tax. The majority of cheaters and scammers will diminish under the FairTax when we humans become truly equal.

It is disheartening to watch young adults join the labor force and already, early on, they speak outright of where the heck is their money going? Young adults (20ish) have made it clear to me that they care not how much the consumption tax is, they just want IRS out of their lives. I've heard so many derogatory statements from these young ones such as:

1) Why should I work, I can't keep it ($$$).
2) The harder I try, the more they (IRS) take.
3) I'm just working to pay IRS, so why work?

Now this is where studies offer the data that the FairTax will increase the incentive to work because the young ones will 'KEEP WHAT THEY EARN.' And Lord knows we FairTax Volunteers are trying really desperately to give them incentive and momentum to flourish. It is nearly unbelievable how the 20ish bracket (if I may) is pro FairTax! They will want to work because with the FairTax one can actually 'SEE A FUTURE' for one's self.

As for me, I could care less what the FairTax rate is, 23% or higher. I want IRS to leave me alone so I can get on with my life, NOT THEIRS!

I hope this will post tonight because I tried this last night and couldn't get it to post. My computer is getting ugly on me this week. You know, the dial-up thing, but I like dial up.

HAPPY NEW YEAR! Am very busy getting signatures. From, Betty.

MARK said...

Just because our present system sucks, doesn't mean the Fairtax works -- or is even sane.

People think because our present system is so bad, the Fairtax system has to work.

Wrong. The fairtax system is based on fallacies and wishful thinking, plus horrible math.

Fairtax might work -- if it could exempt high medical bills from the tax, and exempt rent, and exempt insurance premiums.

But ALL -- repeat ALL medical bills are taxed. ALL rent. ALL insurance premiums. ALL utilties.

How will an 80 year old stroke victim in a nursing home pay 30,000 tax on her medical care?

How can the government POSSIBLY pay itself a huge sales tax -- that nonsense, utter nonsense. The government would have to PAY it, to get it. Fairtax pretends to be able to make the government pay itself.

Fairtax doesnt work. It can not work.

Lets get something that works. This doesn't work.

MARK said...

You don't care if fairtax is 23% or higher?

Good -- cause it would be more like 60-70%.

Cancer patients and nursing home patients won't be able to pay this.

Government can't pay it, its just paying itself, its a farce.

Many people won't be able to pay 30 or 50 or 60% sales tax on their RENT, on their UTILITIES, on their car insurance, health insurance, etc.

A high sales tax on new houses and cars would create an almost immediate depression.

Fairtax can't work.