Craig234 said:
Craigsub, the research meant reading enough to familiarize yourself with the issue and the arguments - not grabbing one quote, and saying 'it's bogus'.
That's not analysis, that's not argument, that's not dicussion - it's lame and pointless, and a waste of time. It's not what I suggested.
Here's a simple question for you. What percent of people's income is spent by each income bracket, up to and including the top 1%?
That'll give an idea of how much of people's incomes they'll spend on the national income tax.
Of course, any tax can be made to look one way or another by tweaking the numbers, such as with a large 'exemption' amount.
Once the tax is in place, will the exemption remain? What guarantee is there?
Regardless of the exemption, the ultra wealthy, as I said, spend most of their money not on taxable purchases, but on acquiring yet more wealth.
And you have yet to answer the simple question, if as you argue, most pay less, a few pay the same and no one pays more, how is it revenue neutral?
I may post something later that you skipped over, one of the studies on it being a regressive tax, but you have plenty to respond to here.
How is the NST TAX NEUTRAL ?
In today's tax climate, the vast majority of the "rich" pay a low tax burden due to things like tax free muni bonds. By rich, I mean the truly rich ... people with $100 million portfolios. These portfolios are not taxed. The truly rich can earn $5 - $6 or $7 million per year, totally tax free.
The IRS estimate Tax free Bonds pay appx. $150 Billion per year ... This $150 Billion is being spent today ... and generates no taxes. Under the NST, there would be a windfall of $34.5 Billion per year.
NEXT, let us look at the Underground Economy. Illegal immigrants, Drug dealers, Teachers working summer cash jobs, carpenters, mechanics, bartenders, waitstaff ... the list goes on and on ... They earn money and pay NO tax on these earnings. Barons had an article last year regarding this ... and today, the underground economy is costing the IRS appx. $400 billion per year .. and growing.
BARONS said:
COST OT THE UNDERGROUND ECONOMY: ...In the process, the underground economy is undermining the effectiveness of the Internal Revenue Service, which is highly dependent on employees' withholding taxes. If the IRS could collect all the taxes it says that it is owed from the underground economy in a given year, then the current budget deficit would disappear overnight. And if the IRS could collect these taxes every year, then the nation would have surpluses as far as the eye can see.
The IRS has estimated that its tax gap -- the estimated amount of taxes owed minus the amount collected -- is around $311 billion in any given year. The agency will produce a new estimate in 2005, and it could be as high as $400 billion, says former IRS Commissioner Donald Alexander. Now a lawyer in Washington, he cites a rise in private contracting and the opportunities it affords for not reporting income.
The gap number measures only a portion of the underground economy. Because the number is extrapolated from audited returns, it makes no allowances for criminal enterprises that report no income, and it even fails to capture some garden varieties of non-reporting. The unreported wages of illegal immigrants alone could be costing the government another $50 billion a year, says Justich.
Adding the 2 together, and you realize a gain of $434 Billion per year from the NST ... which reduces the burden on all those reading this who DON"T get to make money tax free. The NST does not discriminate .. anyone who spends money here will be paying taxes.
You ask what guarantees there are that the exemptions will remain as they are. What guarantee do you have that congress won't pass a law making ANY changes in tax law ? You don't.
However, the tax, as proposed, gives generous rebates to make sure the poor and middle class are not hurt by its passage. Changing the rebate would be politically difficult, as millions would know what it was, and the first person to suggest that we get rid of the $6072 for the family of four might as well resign from congress. This rebate means the first $26,400 the family of four earns is totally tax free, assuming a worst case, in which they spent all their income on new products.
Getting back to the top 1% ... so much of their income is in the form of lower tax items .... Tax Free Funds, Capital Gains ... etc ... that it is a pretty complicated task to calculate.
Think on this, though. Most super rich live pretty well. Under tax law over the past 50 years, a $1 million dollar yacht was a write off. In the NST, it is a tax producer. The Rolls ? Another tax revenue enhancement.
For my personal end ... I would lose the ability to write off business travel ... which is about $60,000 per year, which saves me $21,000. Instead, I would be paying $13,800 on my business travel .. a "swing" of $34,800.
The NST takes a lot of deduction activity for those over, say, $200K per year, and turns it into a tax revenue.