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Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Should we adopt the Fair Tax?

Yes
15
No votes
No
7
No votes
It hurts to think enough to decide
3
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Total votes : 25

Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Kevin_C » Sun 09 Jul 2006, 22:03:25

The Fair Tax has been slowly gaining support in congress in the last few years. What do you guys think of it?

Details, Details, Details:
The Fair Tax is a proposal to remove the Income, Social Security and Medicare Tax and replace them with a sales tax that will tax every consumable good once in the item's lifetime.

How it works:

1) First thing every month every person with a social security card will recieve a rebate check that represents the amount a person with a yearly income of at the poverty line would spend in the sales tax. For a single person with no children, that is 9,800 dollars currently in the US. The rebate would be 2254 dollars.

2) Items that are brand new and never used have a 23% sales tax. This would bring in about the same amount of tax money to the federal government as all of the current federal income taxes combined.
Note that this tax only applies to new items. New cars are taxed, but used aren't. Business purchases are also not taxed.

3) Income tax would no longer be a part of the cost of production for any item. On adverage this would lower the cost of new items by around 20%. It will vary item to item. The new sales tax will increase the price by 23%. There should be no huge difference in prices due to the sales tax.

4)It is a progressive tax. Due to the rebate people who make less than the poverty line have less than 0% net taxes. People who spend around 30,000 a year will pay a net tax between 11 and 16 percent. People who spend 200,000 per year on new items will pay around 21 to 22 percent net sales tax. This is after the rebate remember. Before the rebate everyone pays 23% sales tax.

What do you guys think? Should we get rid of the income tax and replace it with the fair tax?

check out the Fair Tax FAQ for more info
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby katkinkate » Mon 10 Jul 2006, 04:48:02

Sounds a bit like our 'Goods and Services Tax' (GST). We were told it would replace all stamp duties and wholesale tax and various other taxes and fees that bump up the prices and maybe even reduce the income tax a little. They eventually got it through all the review process and started it up. As far as I know none/not many of the other taxes were stopped and prices for everything went up even higher. It sounds good but it's just another way to get your money. You can be guaranteed they (the govt) will be getting more out of it than the people.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Princess » Mon 10 Jul 2006, 13:09:21

If it passes, I'll be buying lots of used items. Sounds interesting in theory, but you just know Congress will find a way to mess it up.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Specop_007 » Mon 10 Jul 2006, 14:38:21

I just hate taxes.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Kylon » Mon 10 Jul 2006, 15:05:20

I think it's another way to help the rich.

The dumb/poor folk who are ignorant and uneducated will tend to buy out of convenience, things that are near here.

The rich on the other hand, if taxes are too high, can simply spend their money somewhere else.

So essentially what would happen, is it would be mainly the poor and the middle class paying all the taxes.

However, there are some ways they could make it work to our advantage.

They would have to prevent capital flight and spending in foreign countries by the rich, perhaps have a tax on capital flight equivalent to what they'd save, or more by spending in a foreign country.

Also, we shouldn't tax necessities. Cosmetics should be taxed, medicine should not. Big Macs should be taxed, food should not. Beer/alchohol should be taxed, water should not. Video games should be taxed, educational materials for the most part shouldn't be. We should also tax heavily fashion clothes, as most of them are overpriced, and although it would severly hurt the fashion industry, it would pump alot more revenue into the government.

Luxury goods should be taxed by almost 100%, with the exception of your first wedding ring(people who marry twice, if they don't have their old wedding ring, well then, they'll have to pay the tax). Most Jewelery is marked way, way over what it cost them to make it.

Tools should not be taxed, as they are used/can be used to produce resources for the civilization and or save resources.

Basically certain goods should be taxed almost too extinction, other goods should be made more readily available(like infrastructure used to produce resources, such as solar cells, tidal turbines, stirling engines, or robotics pieces).

Essentially everything that's really good for us we shouldn't tax, and all the things that are trinkets, should be super heavily taxed, this way we curb consumer spending, conserve resources, and focus the resources into the purchasing of things we need.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Ludi » Mon 10 Jul 2006, 16:13:33

I'm mostly anti-tax, personally.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Kevin_C » Mon 10 Jul 2006, 18:14:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Kylon', 'I') think it's another way to help the rich.

The dumb/poor folk who are ignorant and uneducated will tend to buy out of convenience, things that are near here.

The rich on the other hand, if taxes are too high, can simply spend their money somewhere else.

So essentially what would happen, is it would be mainly the poor and the middle class paying all the taxes.


So what you are saying is that the rich are going to move out of the country.

They won't build new houses, they won't buy new cars, they won't buy food, they won't buy gas, etc etc. They are just going to leave.
I think this is a little unrealistic.

What I think you are missing is that this won't result in huge tax hike or huge price increases. A very nice size of the product price is what companies are paying to income tax. If the fair tax replaces the income tax, the price of every item in the US will drop an adverage 20% before the 23% sales tax. The price of product shouldn't change. Rich people will likely pay no more than they always have. This is the approx. rate they pay now. Plus, they won't have to spend thousands doing their income taxes at the end of every year.

I like the idea that the rich might just move out of the country. Government would become more honest if the rich left. But it won't happen.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Roy » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 09:11:09

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')the fair tax replaces the income tax, the price of every item in the US will drop an adverage 20% before the 23% sales tax.


Ideally, it sounds like a great plan.

However, given the type of greed we see with corporations, I don't believe the prices would fall as you state above.

That's my biggest objection. I see the corps trying to increase their bottom line rather than lowering prices 20%. The actual lowering might be 15%, but in the end, we as the consumer would still get soaked.

Also, the idea that the rich would simply move their spending overseas is valid IMO. When I write "rich", I mean the upper 2%.

The rest of us would just have to muddle through I guess. :)

Good idea but I just don't trust private businesses to do what is right or what is best for me, the people of the US, the enviroment, or the world. Its all about the $$$ and every action taken by these entities seems geared toward increasing profits at any cost regardless of the consequences.

Maybe I'm just jaded.... No, I am jaded.

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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby smallpoxgirl » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 12:48:18

Sounds like a great deal to me. Always struck me as a profound waste of humanity all those shmucks down at HR Block spending their lives filling out forms. I think discouraging purchase of new items would be a huge ecological benefit and a big benefit to the poor. The throw-away economy would tank, but IMHO that's not a bad thing.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby strider3700 » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 13:05:29

I'd love it. I pay more in taxes each year then I actually spend on goods. Dump the income tax and I'd have even more saved. Of course this could crash the economy as saving would be a much better option then spending on questionable purchases.
shame on us, doomed from the start
god have mercy on our dirty little hearts
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby greenworm » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 13:12:22

I never understood why the poor/lower middle class pay taxes, I mean if they collectively organized and revolted against this slavery how could the irs actively prosecute millions of cases. :lol: Nevermind the fact that income tax law is little vague and not mentioned in the constitution.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Tyler_JC » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 13:17:30

http://www.fool.com/news/commentary/200 ... 030104.htm

"The average corporate profit margin in the United States has been around 8% for the past 25 years."

If corporations did not lower their prices, that margin would increase to 28%, right? Well that could never happen in anything even close to a free market. Everyone would get into the game if the profit margins were in the high 20% range.

Large profits encourage more competition.

If I can make $100 in profit for every 1 dollar of product I sell, what's to stop everyone in the country from selling my product?

The price of my product will drop signficantly as more people move in to get a share of the enormous profits.

My profit margin will fall drastically. Eventually I will only be able to make about 8 cents in profit per product.

The world's corporations do not work together to keep prices high, if they did, corporate profit margins would be a lot higher than just 8.3%.

Big Oil especially has weak profit margins. Even with record oil prices, Exxon's thrid quarter profit margin in 2005 was only 9.9%. Oil prices went up drastically and Exxon is only a few points better than the historical average. Corporate profit margins have a pretty firm ceiling. The Fair Tax theory claims that the cost of each product would fall by 20% for the average corporation. This very likely means a 20% drop in consumer prices.

Take a look at this graph:

Image

This concept is one of the more fundemental concepts in economic theory and it looks like a sound theory to me.

Anyone care to challenge one of the premises?
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Tyler_JC » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 13:25:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('greenworm', 'I') never understood why the poor/lower middle class pay taxes, I mean if they collectively organized and revolted against this slavery how could the irs actively prosecute millions of cases. :lol: Nevermind the fact that income tax law is little vague and not mentioned in the constitution.


My friend, the Tax Police would simply garner the wages of everyone who did not pay.

What makes more sense is creating a Bottom 50% Party.

Assuming these people bother to actually vote for a change, they would have a political mandate to change the tax code in their favor.

They only pay 4% of federal income taxes anyway, it shouldn't be too hard to change that number to 0%.

The top 10% pay 70% of the federal income tax burden. If you simply raise the amount of taxes these people pay by 9%, the Bottom 50% Party would achieve its goal of paying no income taxes.

In fact, just doubling the personal standard deduction would take TENS OF MILLIONS of poor people off of the income tax rolls overnight. This would be politically popular because it would lower everyone's tax burden, with the most benefits going to the poorest Americans. I don't know how you make up for the difference, but whatever...
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby 128shot » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 14:04:42

wow, people just hate the rich on this forum


I wish I was ignorant enough to be that jealous and egotistical about myself to think that my opinion on somebody who is ultra wealthy-who I never met before even-is such a bad person. I mean fuck'em! they only employ you.....
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby smallpoxgirl » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 14:29:08

Actually we don't hate all rich people 128shot....just you.

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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby holmes » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 15:08:41

SPG, They aint elites. They are the BASE! Fk em. Im a free man with a noble conscience. They wealthy love ponzi schemes. They are inconducive to true freedom. They are mostly simple scum that create massive complex problems. Worhtless turds in my view. Complex individuals usually live simple existence. Einstein. If the turds would stop the ponzi and the schemes and the egendas and the overlording my ass then it would be fine. Yet they steal taxes for the poo and downtrodden and to fortify their ponzi. I see through thier BS like a window. Im rich. Materialism is not rich. Im no hater. Just dont add me into your scheming shit. and they are. The base is what Bush the cock smoker calls em. I call them hashstains on the underwear. wealthy prefessionals do not impress me. take their oil and machine appendages away they are fetus's slapped onto the bare earth. below even me.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby greenworm » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 16:35:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')y friend, the Tax Police would simply garner the wages of everyone who did not pay.


How would they do that when they don't know how much one makes provided you have the right type of employer? :lol:

Plus, don't they have to prove that you didn't pay, doesn't this need to be proven in court, they can't just assume your guilty of a crime and garnish your wages. This is the type of bottleneck that could be exploited. BTW, for all you impressionable types, uncle greenworm is not endorsing such activities. :lol: In fact, the irs loses very rarely when they do decide to prosecute, 99% of tax evaders lose. There are examples of the people winning, for instance, Vernice Kuglin won her decision because she couldn't find the actual law that states that her income should be taxed. She contacted the irs twice and they never replied and the court ruled in her favor. :lol:
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby ChicknLittle » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 18:48:49

I think this is a system that might favor the wealthy... and therfore it has a chance of becoming law. The poor(er) spend all of their income on things necessary for survival (food, housing, transportation) that would be taxed, while the wealthy spend a very small percentage on their income on actual things and more on investment/savings which would not be taxed as they are not goods/services. It is a step backward if your goal is to have the wealthy pay more taxes than the poor. If the poor are given exemptions (as proposed) then the burden of taxes would fall on the lower-middle and middle class much more heavily than the wealthy.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby Daculling » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 20:22:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Kylon', 'B')eer/alchohol should be taxed,


I have a serious issue with your proposal.

In any case taxes won't matter much when no one is making any money... soon.
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Re: Fair Tax - Replace Income Tax with Sales Tax? Yes, or No

Unread postby 128shot » Tue 11 Jul 2006, 21:35:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ChicknLittle', 'I') think this is a system that might favor the wealthy... and therfore it has a chance of becoming law. The poor(er) spend all of their income on things necessary for survival (food, housing, transportation) that would be taxed, while the wealthy spend a very small percentage on their income on actual things and more on investment/savings which would not be taxed as they are not goods/services. It is a step backward if your goal is to have the wealthy pay more taxes than the poor. If the poor are given exemptions (as proposed) then the burden of taxes would fall on the lower-middle and middle class much more heavily than the wealthy.



except the ultra rich and semi-rich buy fancy houses and big yachts that would add tons of revenue. If you guys think for one second the rich will stop spending like animals than you're dead wrong.


IMHO its not suppose to help anyone, its just suppose to equally divide taxes up based on income without all that messy beauracatic stuff that goes along with normal income tax.

Though I think clothing and food shouldn't be taxed. Everything else you can tax away really. Reasonabley this might bring in more tax revenue, as this actually adds people to the middle class because living expenses would actually go down when you keep all or near all of your income....


This is what I hate about peak oilers, everyone seems left leaning or socialist...
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