Ask HN: Putting aside your political views – do you support the Fair Tax?
Firstly, you don't specify what the Fair Tax is
> The Fair Tax would repeal the current tax code and replace it with a single national consumption tax that is pro-growth and allows Americans to keep every cent of their hard-earned money.
Source: https://buddycarter.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?Docum...
Secondly, what do you think "political views" are? Politics is how we mediate social interactions. Our political views are implicitly linked with how we think society should be governed and how that government should be funded. For many people, their view on taxation is their primary political view.
Leaving aside the loaded, imprecisely specified question - I don't support regressive taxes. Regressive taxes mean more of the tax burden lies on the people who can afford it least. An income tax that scales with income leaves everyone with sufficient money to spend. People with higher incomes contribute more in absolute terms, but the same in % terms. Personally I don't mind paying 30% in taxes regardless of what I earn.
Whereas a consumption tax is bananas. It benefits me, who saves a large chunk of my income. I would keep even more. But a person living pay check to pay check, that person spends almost all their money despite being taxed very little. For that person, their income wouldn't rise much, but the prices of everything they want to buy would rise.
And second order effects are pretty bad. Consumption taxes reduce consumption. That's bad for growth, no matter how you look at it.
The people who want this clearly learned economics from a work of fiction.
Something tells me that you love to critique things to hear yourself speak before actually answering a question.
P.S. it's spelled "paycheck" not "pay check". ;)
The first line of Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paycheck)
> A paycheck, also spelled paycheque, pay check or pay cheque
"Oh no, the top comment on my question makes me look stupid. Quick, let me make a pedantic correction so I can look smart. Let me also ignore the substance of the comment so I don't have to re-examine my priors."
When asked a loaded question, I point out its loaded before answering it. I could be wrong though. Perhaps you were merely ignorant of what “politics” means. In that case, I’m sorry for calling your question loaded. I hope you’ve found this educational.
Perhaps you're too ignorant to step out of emotions with politics and focus on the question. Sorry for thinking you might have common sense :)
Ah, you missed the part where I answered your question in detail. :)
It couldn’t hurt to develop some reading comprehension. :)
I can't think of anything more "political views" than tax policy. Literally any opinion on the matter is inherently political.
And no I don't support it, it is regressive. Just another rhetorical trap for the rich and powerful to push tax burdens onto the poor. It's "simplicity" a slight of hand to further the demonization of the IRS.
Does tax code need cleaning up, YES. It has caught up in a "starve the beast" strategy for decades. Make the tax codes too complicated for individuals to actually comply with, under-fund and hobble the IRS but mandate them such that they can only practically hound poor people and can't audit the rich.
No political party has incentive to make anything but superficial progress in pursuit of popular goals and continue to move actual policy in support of the rich and powerful regardless of which political party has power.
I support the Even Fairer Tax, and anyone who doesn't is a monster. It's right there in the name!
Putting aside my political views is impossible to do on a question of how a polity should finance itself. This submission is submarine-style PR for a conservative initiative that aims to 'promote freedom, fairness, and economic opportunity by repealing the income tax and other taxes, abolishing the Internal Revenue Service, and enacting a national sales tax to be administered primarily by the States.'
If you want to argue that this system would be superior because Reasons then I would be interested in hearing your argument (although I probably won't agree with it), but you didn't even bother to articulate what you find interesting about it. Perhaps delete this and try again with more substance.
The Fair Tax would increase inequality in the USA by shifting the burden of tax payment onto the poorest.
The rich spend between 1 and 10% of their income on goods and services, whereas the poor spend upwards of 100% of their income, and even more by going into debt to cover life expenses.
All this tax would do is ensure that the wealth of the rich remains locked up and out of circulation forever, multiplying tax free in hedge funds (basically sucking even more money out of the economy), while the poor pay for everything.
> The Fair Tax would increase inequality in the USA by shifting the burden of tax payment onto the poorest.
So there are some provisions to address this:
- basic rebate: every person gets a rebate corresponding to a base amount of tax paid; this is intended to ensure poverty-stricken folks are not taxed out of subsistence (HHOS). This is like earned income credit but it’s streamlined so the bureaucracy is minimized and there is no magical cutoff. It’s optional so progressive types can refuse it.
- tax only first sale: only new goods and services are taxed. resale is not taxed. However this does mean direct services are taxed and that may be unpleasant for those who earn by invoicing for service (lawyers, truck drivers, etc). OTOH consumable things like food, disposable diapers, etc will always be taxed
- Only the federal individual income tax is repealed and outlawed. There’s plenty of taxation schemes left and some even applies to wealthy individuals and corporations.
I question your explanation of “rich get richer, poor pay for everything”, it doesn’t seem obvious. Hedge funds serve a purpose or they wouldn’t exist, but you seem to imply they only serve to pull money out of the economy. That at least would be deflationary, but AFAICT it seems like the appreciation of hedge funds at least creates wealth that gets put to some use in further capitalization. Which grows the economy, so I scratch my head at your characterization.
Furthermore “the poor pay for everything” seems like it could be substantiated only if the actual amount corresponding to the 100%+ you claim the poor will pay exceeds the amount corresponding to the 1%-10% the rich will pay such that the latter is lost in the noise. The reality even in the current tax scheme is the rich pay for everything eventually (even more so in California, the pinnacle of benevolent taxation, up yours Franchise Tax Board).
- basic rebate: every person gets a rebate corresponding to a base amount of tax paid; this is intended to ensure poverty-stricken folks are not taxed out of subsistence (HHOS). This is like earned income credit but it’s streamlined so the bureaucracy is minimized and there is no magical cutoff. It’s optional so progressive types can refuse it.
How are you going to minimize the bureaucracy? Poor people are still going to have document all their income/assets to qualify for a rebate, richer people who hate taxes will channel their income through some sort of trust while claiming that their designer suits are owned by the trust and administrators are required to wear them like any other employee.
Hedge funds serve a purpose or they wouldn’t exist
As does Fentanyl, but I bet you don't think it's a good idea to sprinkle it on your cornflakes. As does fentanyl, but that doesn't mean it's a good idea to sprinkle it on your cornflakes.
> Poor people are still going to have document all their income/assets to qualify for a rebate,
nope, no qualifications, no means test. Only one rebate per person, same amount for each person, computed from poverty line statistics. Children too, legal guardian collects.
> As does Fentanyl, but I bet you don't think it's a good idea to sprinkle it on your cornflakes.
I’m not sure how to construe your analogy. I would agree its inappropriate to eat hedge fund participants for breakfast, but OTOH Fentanyl does have a legitimate use even if some might abuse it as a cereal topping. Perhaps you should clarify your original point instead.
Fair Tax isn’t really intended to address wealth disparity and the outsize influence of the wealthy. The Fair Tax asserts the defects of the Income Tax outweigh the virtues, particularly WRT to transgressions against individual rights, costs vs benefits, and exceeding limited government. It's an alternative tax system. The macroeconomic impact is debatable, static analysis is probably an error due to the outsize influence of perverse tax incentives.
no qualifications, no means test. Only one rebate per person, same amount for each person
Ah, so by 'base amount of tax paid' you mean averaged across the population? A rebate generally implies a refund of prior payment, so I found your summary confusing.
I’m not sure how to construe your analogy.
That just because something has a purpose does not imply it is a net good. In general I think high concentrations of wealth are bad on a systemic level, like too much sugar leading to diabetes. So I'm not sure that the capital allocation performed by hedge funds is a necessity for an economy to operate sustainably.
> A rebate generally implies a refund of prior payment, so I found your summary confusing.
Sorry, it is a “pre-bate”, intended to offset the first x dollars of tax that would be paid on “necessities”, determined by some poverty line/CPI related computation performed periodically. No means test or qualification except citizenship. Don’t recall if there was any effort to address non-citizens that were not dependents.
> In general I think high concentrations of wealth are bad on a systemic level, like too much sugar leading to diabetes.
I can’t quite dis-agree with you, but I’m not certain how to address it. Perhaps we should just have rules/criteria regarding breaking up concentrations of wealth/power or splitting up giant organizations. Meanwhile this happens under the current tax system, thus orthogonal WRT the objectives of FairTax.
Note: I'm not saying that hedge funds are bad or anything; I've just singled out one aspect of them that will cause problems in a world without a capital gains tax.
It helps to stop thinking of money as "property" and more as "the power to take from the national pool of resources". One is something you own, the other is a grant by the polity to take from the nation's resources. Regardless of the amount of money we have, at the end of the day there is a limit to how much can be bought with it, because we as a country only have so much stuff to divide among the populace. Money and the market are just efficient means to decide who can take how much.
Money lending structures such as hedge funds absolutely do serve the useful purpose of financing promising ventures that could bring real material wealth. But if the money supply is allowed to become too lopsided (i.e. too much inequality), your efficiency, competitiveness, and effectiveness as a country diminishes astonishingly fast. This phenomena has been understood for at least 4000 years, with one of the main correction methods being a debt jubilee to (among other things) correct runaway inequality and keep money from being too idle. The IMF has many pointers to this issue here: https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2011/09/14/why-inequal...
There was actually a study done a few years back that isolated an "optimal inequality" range; too much or too little and your efficiency goes down. I wish I could find it again...
But regardless, an income tax (as well as others such as wealth tax, inheritance tax etx) will take a larger share of money out of the hands of the rich (who can't really do anything with it except lend it, making it less efficient). A straight consumption tax, even with rebates, will still cause a disproportionate amount to be paid by those who actually produce things, while rewarding those who let money go idle. And that's bad for everyone.
Also one more note: The current tax system in America is by no means efficient. The richest can basically pay no tax at all under the current rules, and that of course is bad for the same reasons I outlined above. Many other countries have laws that prevent this sort of thing, so it's not insurmountable, but one must be careful to understand the implications of changes to a tax scheme, and I believe that those promoting the Fair Tax have not considered everything.
Just according to keikaku.
(Translator's note: keikaku means plan.)
It's not really a plan per se; it's just a natural consequence (or emergent phenomena, if you will) of a political system where one must already be rich and connected in order to become a senator and thus affect the laws of the land. Not all countries have this problem.
My post was more bleak sarcasm than analysis, but I think it's about 50-50. Perverse incentives are part of the issue, but there are networks that diligently and patiently work to maximize their number and perversity, eg applying the lessons of selectorate theory in a maximally adversarial rather than diagnostic way.
I support the abstract idea of replacing our convoluted tax code with an extremely simple, straight-forward one that avoids negative impact on the poor and maintains an appropriate level of taxation on those (individuals and businesses) with millions/billions of dollars who are not personally impacted the same way (when you have a billion dollars, no reasonable amount of even "high" tax is going to affect your ability to have shelter, food, etc like it would when levied on lower income classes). I am even okay with setting that threshold relatively high.
But this will never happen, and even if it did, it will only affect things at the federal level. The very way our country is designed and divided by states, counties, local jurisdictions makes me feel like we're doomed to complexity forever. However, simplification on the federal side would be a huge step forward. I don't claim to know exactly what that solution would look like but I think it is possible. I am not convinced "Fair Tax" is it, however.
I find it very interesting that people can't put aside political views and speak about whether or not having a consumption tax, in their opinion, is a good or bad idea when compared to the current system.
This question isn't about a persons view of Biden or Trump.
I think kstenerud did a great job at expressing their views without having to speak about politics.
Is this an indicator at how toxic social media has become and how people have become addicted to arguing vs. having a discussion?
I was thinking about how a consumption tax aka Fair Tax does have some benefits, but in the case that kstenerud pointed out, depending on the percentage of the tax, it could hurt the poor. For instance, if a gallon of milk now goes for $20, it's going to hurt the lower class.
I do agree with kstenerud that such a tax could hurt the poorest people. This begs the question of is there a way to introduce such a tax that allows the poor to transition into a Fair Tax? e.g., Allowing people making under X 2 years not to pay any income taxes?
Hopefully those of you with strong political opinions take it easy on this thread because honestly, it's like the smell of your own shit... no one really wants to sniff it ;)
> I do agree with kstenerud that such a tax could hurt the poorest people. This begs the question of is there a way to introduce such a tax that allows the poor to transition into a Fair Tax? e.g., Allowing people making under X 2 years not to pay any income taxes?
Fair Tax addresses that point with the rebate to alleviate the impact on the poverty-stricken. It is debatable as to whether this is a fair solution; OTOH it is also debatable as to whether the current system is fair to the poor.
It’s not so clear that Milk would go to $20 a gallon under the Fair Tax and not so in the current regime ( Sudden Inflation Now Syndrome seems mostly unchecked ).