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April. 2005
John Linder, a Georgia Republican member of the House of
Representatives wants to get rid of the Income Tax.
Yeah
John, don’t we all?
Well, not exactly all. Certainly the lawyers don’t
want that and the accountants blanch at the very mention
. . . stir in the housing, conference, restaurant and airline
industries, add a liberal dash of pubs and clubs, deferred,
referred and inferred stock options and top off with taking
the power of taxation away from the powerful who impose them
and what you have left is a very small contingent of supporters.
But we really need this and it’s good for America
so it probably hasn’t got a chance.
George F. Will’s brilliant Thursday column lays out a pretty good case for Linder’s plan, but
John Linder says it pretty well himself; “Any fundamental
tax reform must result in a tax code that is simple, fair,
voluntary, transparent, border neutral, industry neutral,
strengthens Social Security and has manageable transition
costs.
He goes on to say, ”These neutral principles would
all be fulfilled by my proposal to eliminate all income and
payroll
taxes
and
replace them with a national retail sales tax. This "FairTax" plan
is a compelling proposal that would benefit the U.S. economy,
businesses across the nation, and all American taxpayers.
These principles include:
- ”Simple: The tax reforms must result in a tax code
that is easy to understand for all Americans - no matter
one's education, occupation, or station in life. The
FairTax plan is simple. It eliminates the more than 10,000
pages
of complexities in the current income tax code once and
for all, replacing them with a simple uniform sales tax.
- ”Fair: Fundamental tax reform proposals must protect
the poor and treat everyone else the same. No exemptions.
No exclusions. No advantages. The FairTax plan is fair.
It contains a rebate of the sales tax for every household,
designed
to totally rebate the tax consequences of spending up to
the poverty line. This rebate mechanism protects low-income
Americans, ensuring that every household can buy necessities
tax-free. Under the FairTax, all Americans receive equal,
fair treatment.
- ”Voluntary: Americans deserve a tax system that
is not coercive or intrusive. Under the FairTax, every
citizen
becomes a voluntary taxpayer, paying as much as they choose,
when they choose, by how they choose to spend.
- ”Transparent: The cost of government should be transparent
to all Americans, with no "hidden" taxes. According
to a Harvard study, the current tax component in our price
system averages 22 percent, meaning that the least well
off among us lose 22 percent of their purchasing power
from the
embedded costs of corporate taxes, payroll taxes, and compliance
costs. The FairTax eliminates the hidden tax component
from our price system and allows the market to drive the
tax component
out of the price system.
- ”Border Neutral: Any fundamental tax reform plans
must ensure that our exports are unburdened by any tax
component in the price system, while imports carry the
same tax burden
at retail as our domestic competition. Under the FairTax, imported goods and domestically produced goods would receive
the same U.S. tax treatment at the checkout counter. Moreover,
our exports would go abroad unburdened by any tax component
in the price system.
- ”Industry Neutral: The President's tax reforms
must be neutral between businesses and industries. There
is no
good reason that our neighbor who builds a bookstore, hires
our kids, votes in our elections, and supports our community
should be placed at a seven percent disadvantage against
an Internet bookstore. Nor is there a good reason why I,
as a dentist, didn't have to collect a sales tax in Georgia
while my neighbor, the retailer, did. The first principle
of government ought to be neutrality, and a plan like the
FairTax would ensure industry neutrality.
- ”Strengthens Social Security: Fundamental reform
must address the future of Social Security. The FairTax plan would
strengthen Social Security by paying Social Security benefits
out of the general sales tax revenues. The sales tax would
be collected from 282 million Americans and 51 million
visitors to our shores. Revenues to Social Security and
Medicare would
double, as we expect the size of the economy to double,
in 13 to 14 years under the proposal.
”Given the significant impacts of a weakened U.S.
economy, Congress and the White House must no longer allow
a tax code that inhibits economic growth to persist. Eliminating
the income tax will bring long-term interest rates down to
municipal bond rates, ultimately reducing interest rates
by 30 percent. The FairTax would bring a 26 percent increase
in exports in the first year, as well as a 76 percent increase
in capital investment, leading to increases in productivity
and real wages.”
So, if I understand this correctly, we all stop paying
income taxes and the companies we work for stop
collecting them on the government’s
behalf. Offshore tax havens will become merely places to
vacation, the worldwide movement
of American capital can free itself from tax implication
and foreign capital can flow unencumbered to our shores.
I see losers, but they’re mostly in the second
paragraph
and the losses they sustain are the result of a gradual
accumulation over past decades of special interest profitability.
We are not a special interest nation, not when we are at
our best.
Get out of the Archives and read what Jim's writing
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