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Updated February 26, 2008
FairTax / FlawedTax
Why the National Sales Tax is Bad for America
Over the past few years, the so-called “FairTax”
has gained attention in limited circles through talk radio,
blogs, YouTube and MySpace. Despite its lack of support
from any credible economist, that attention has been bleeding
into mainstream media.
So what is the so-called “FairTax”? It’s
a proposed national sales tax that would, in theory, replace
all other federal taxes. Advocates of the plan argue that
it would “simplify” the tax code by getting
rid of the estate tax, personal income tax, payroll tax,
corporate income taxes and the IRS itself.
The FairTax, however, would only replace one government
agency with another, while shifting the tax burden onto
middle- and low-income families.
The 50% Sales
Tax
The plan is rife with distortions. For example, supporters
claim the FairTax is a 23% sales tax. That claim, however,
uses misleading math. For example, if you bought a $100
item, and a $30 tax were added to the price of that item,
you would incur a 30% tax, right? That’s certainly
the way every other sales tax in the nation is calculated.
In FairTax math, it would be a 23% tax, since 23% of the
final price ($30/$130 = 23%) is the tax.
That’s only the beginning. In calculating how much
of a sales tax it would take to replace all other federal
taxes, the crafters of the FairTax included purchases made
by the government itself. So, if the government buys a bomber,
it would pay itself a tax. If the government builds a school,
it would pay itself a little more. The problem here is that
the government paying itself does not actually raise revenue.
When this type of circular math and other distortions are
taken out of the tax equation, it would take a sales tax
of over a 50% to replace current federal taxes. Imagine
paying a 50% sales tax on the next house you buy (Yes, it
would apply to new homes)!
Even the Bush Administration’s tax reform panel
recognized these gross miscalculations and chose not to
endorse the national sales tax idea. The panel noted that
the tax rate would have to be between 34 and 49 percent
just to replace the federal income tax, let alone every
other federal tax.
Another Tax Break for the Rich
On top of the distortions, the FairTax would shift taxes
onto middle and lower-income families. Like Tennessee’s
sales tax, it would not apply to purchases, such as stocks
and bonds, savings and private school tuition, typically
made by higher income families. At the same time, applying
it to such things as medical expenses and hospitalization,
would essentially kick people when they’re down. Since
these medical expenses could easily surpass families’
income during a crisis, the FairTax would force them to
pay much higher taxes as a portion of their income in bad
years.
In the end, what progressive features our federal tax
system has left, after years of tax breaks for the rich,
would be replaced with a tax system where the more you make,
the less you would pay.
Proponents of the plan attempt
to blunt this fairness argument by offering rebates for
the amount of sales tax paid on family purchases up to the
poverty level. Even with the rebates, low-income families
would still lose, as would most families. A state-by-state
analysis from the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy
(ITEP) found that under the FairTax plan, taxes would rise
an average of $3,260 a year for the bottom 80 percent of
Tennessee taxpayers. Only the top 5% would actually save,
while the richest 1% of Tennesseans would get an annual
tax cut of $162,000 each. See table.
| Income Group |
Bottom
20% |
2nd 20% |
Middle
20% |
3rd 20% |
Next 15% |
Next 4% |
Top 1% |
Average
Tax Hike |
$3,874 |
$3,589 |
$3,478 |
$2,084 |
$7 |
|
|
Average
Tax Cut |
|
|
|
|
|
$6,637 |
$161,613 |
Source: “The
Effects of Replacing Most Federal Taxes with a National
Sales Tax: A State-by-State Distributional Analysis,” Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, September 2004.
In short, the FairTax would just be more of the same,
failed, trickle-down policies that have enriched a small
handful of Americans, stagnated incomes for most and weakened
the nation’s economy as a whole.
The New
IRS
Even the argument that the FairTax would allow us to get
rid of the IRS, and thus government bureaucracy, falls flat
upon further examination. In part, this is because when
a tax rate reaches as high as 50%, the incentives to find
creative ways to avoid the tax grow even stronger.
Since the intent of the FairTax is to tax only end-user
consumption, business-to-business transactions would not
be taxed. This opens up an entire host of tax-evasion opportunities.
Employers would find ways to provide their top executives
with tax-free corporate cars, homes, meals and even clothing.
The tax-evasion opportunities would go beyond business-to-business
transactions. Shady retailers would be tempted to sell items
at steep discounts to people who pay cash, because retailers
can more easily hide cash sales. Some would even find ways
to “barter” for goods as a way of avoiding the
tax.
On top of all the policing, someone in the federal government
would have to administer the rebate program. In short, someone
would have to track current addresses, process applications,
verify the number of children people claim and issue checks.
In the end, the IRS would simply be replaced with another
government agency to administer the rebates, ensure people
don’t claim more children than they actually have,
conduct extensive audits of businesses, track purchases,
monitor retailers and make its best effort to curb the extensive
tax evasion that would occur under such a plan.
Summary
As long as we have schools, police, highways
and other public infrastructures, we will need ways to raise
the money and pay for them. Proposals such as the so-called
“FairTax” do little but shift taxes back onto
the backs of middle- and lower-income families under the
guise of “tax simplification.”
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