Quote:
The flat sales tax hits the poorer harder than the rich. A larger percentage of their income is spent on taxes and these are the people that have less to spend anyway. That's what regressive means. It makes it a lot harder for the people in the lower income brackets to buy the necessities. The rich get to ride on the backs of the poor. Some people may consider that fair. I don't.
I don't know where you get the 49%. I'm sure there are statistics that show that. I'm an engineer that dealt with numbers all my working life. I know numbers and statistics can be manipulated to show what you want them to show. Just group the statistics in a way they show what you want them to show and make some friendly assumptions. But think about this a minute. Currently, the people in the lower tax brackets get a break on income tax. As much as we complain, sales tax really isn't all that bad compared to a lot of other places. To generate the same amount of revenue, the sales tax would only have to go up to a certain amount. I don't know what number is being used this week, but it is a lot less than the 49%. Who do you think will be picking up the slack, making up the difference in total tax revenue? It will not be the super rich. It will hit the people hardest that can least stand it.
I feel extremely confident in saying that a person that earns $20,00 a year will pay a lot higher percentage of their income in taxes with a flat sales tax on consumption and eliminating income tax than a person earning $200,000 or $2,000,000 a year. I think a graduated income tax, with the loopholes removed, is fairer.
This is personal opinion and not proven fact, but I also think a graduated income tax with loopholes removed will generate or save more jobs than a flat tax on all consumption. With the graduated income tax with loopholes removed, the lower bracket people will give less to the government and spend more on consumption, which means more people have to work to produce those goods to be consumed. As Buffet said, the super rich will continue to invest money and continue to make a profit, even with the higher tax rate. History has proven that. Go back to the Eisenhower years and look at the tax structure then. I'm not going to give you the numbers because you would not believe me anyway. Those were times when the middle class was growing. There were a lot of other factors behind that than just the tax rate, but those years are proof the higher tax rates on the super rich did not slow the growth. I don't think tne tax structure caused the growth. I think it did not hinder the growth. Tax structure is important, but other factors caused the growth in the 50's.
These are some of my thoughts on why a flat consumption tax is not best for our country. Others obviously disagree. Fair is a nebulous term. It means different things to different people.
The flat sales tax hits the poorer harder than the rich. A larger percentage of their income is spent on taxes and these are the people that have less to spend anyway. That's what regressive means. It makes it a lot harder for the people in the lower income brackets to buy the necessities. The rich get to ride on the backs of the poor. Some people may consider that fair. I don't.
I don't know where you get the 49%. I'm sure there are statistics that show that. I'm an engineer that dealt with numbers all my working life. I know numbers and statistics can be manipulated to show what you want them to show. Just group the statistics in a way they show what you want them to show and make some friendly assumptions. But think about this a minute. Currently, the people in the lower tax brackets get a break on income tax. As much as we complain, sales tax really isn't all that bad compared to a lot of other places. To generate the same amount of revenue, the sales tax would only have to go up to a certain amount. I don't know what number is being used this week, but it is a lot less than the 49%. Who do you think will be picking up the slack, making up the difference in total tax revenue? It will not be the super rich. It will hit the people hardest that can least stand it.
I feel extremely confident in saying that a person that earns $20,00 a year will pay a lot higher percentage of their income in taxes with a flat sales tax on consumption and eliminating income tax than a person earning $200,000 or $2,000,000 a year. I think a graduated income tax, with the loopholes removed, is fairer.
This is personal opinion and not proven fact, but I also think a graduated income tax with loopholes removed will generate or save more jobs than a flat tax on all consumption. With the graduated income tax with loopholes removed, the lower bracket people will give less to the government and spend more on consumption, which means more people have to work to produce those goods to be consumed. As Buffet said, the super rich will continue to invest money and continue to make a profit, even with the higher tax rate. History has proven that. Go back to the Eisenhower years and look at the tax structure then. I'm not going to give you the numbers because you would not believe me anyway. Those were times when the middle class was growing. There were a lot of other factors behind that than just the tax rate, but those years are proof the higher tax rates on the super rich did not slow the growth. I don't think tne tax structure caused the growth. I think it did not hinder the growth. Tax structure is important, but other factors caused the growth in the 50's.
These are some of my thoughts on why a flat consumption tax is not best for our country. Others obviously disagree. Fair is a nebulous term. It means different things to different people.
