A FairTax volunteer e-mailed this article - a must-read................................
Why not just exempt food and medicine from the tax? Wouldn’t that be fair and simple?
Exempting items by category is neither fair nor simple. Respected economists have shown that the wealthy spend much more on unprepared food, clothing, housing, and medical care than do the poor. Exempting these goods, as many state sales taxes do, actually gives the wealthy a disproportionate benefit.
Also, today these purchases are not exempted from federal taxation. The purchase of food, clothing, and medical services is made from after-income-tax and after-payroll-tax dollars, while their purchase price hides the cost of corporate taxes and private sector compliance costs.
Finally, exempting one product or service, but not another, opens the door to the army of lobbyists and special interest groups that plague and distort our taxation system today. Those who have the money will send lobbyists to Washington to obtain special tax breaks in their own self-interest. This process causes unfair and inefficient distortions in our economy and must be stopped.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
If food and medicine were to be exempted while under the FairTax, the FairTax rate of 23% would need to initially be higher.
And who will pay to cover food and medicine? I will, you will. Get real!
If we start exempting such things here and there under the FairTax before it even gets off the floor, well then, may as well stay with paying higher income taxes!
Post a Comment