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Flat Tax Vs. Fair Tax Vs. Herman Cain's 9-9-9 Plan

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Published : October 20th, 2011
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Category : Editorials

 

 

 

 

For a number of years now, people have asked me whether I prefer a “flat tax” or a “fair tax.” Both are problematic.

The “flat taxis typically conceived as a replacement for the existing personal income tax. This is fine, but it ignores the payroll tax, which is really just another form of income tax. So, it is only half of an income tax reform. In practice, quite a few countries have gone this route, beginning especially with Russia in 2001, and the results have been very good. These countries have generally replaced their income tax systems, but have kept what amounts to relatively high payroll taxes.

I would like to see a top-to-bottom income tax reform, which includes payroll taxes. Or, I should say, which does not include payroll taxes: I would like to see the payroll tax system eliminated entirely and integrated into a single income tax system. Neither Hong Kong nor Singapore, which are models of what can be achieved with a flat tax system (or nearly so in Singapore), have a payroll tax. The result is that taxation on the lowest incomes is very low, and the overall system has a high degree of progressivity despite modest top rates.

Hong Kong’s flat tax system, with no payroll or sales/VAT taxes, generates about 13% of GDP in revenue per year, with a top tax rate of 16%. This is quite good, and shows excellent efficiency and high compliance. However, 13% of GDP is still rather short of the 18.5% of GDP that the U.S. Federal tax system has generated over the past several decades. So, we would have to decide either to reduce spending considerablywhich might be nice, but is a separate discussion — or generate more revenue somehow.

Now we come to the “Fair Tax,” a rather horrible name for a system which aims to generate all revenue from a single national VAT or sales tax. This would be equivalent to a 30% sales tax rate, as normally calculated (exclusive method).

There are a lot of positive things to be said about the Fair Tax, especially the elimination of the IRS and all of the intrusive bookkeeping involved with the income tax. By maximizing the taxation on consumption, we would be theoretically minimizing the taxation on investment, capital, and employment, with potentially excellent results.

The problems are that many states already have a sales tax (9.6% average rate in 2010), which means that the combined rate would either be 39.6% or that states would have to generate income by some other means. States also have income taxes, which presumably would be eliminated along with the federal income tax, thus generating another revenue issue.

We end up with a rather impressively high sales tax rate, which raises the question of tax evasion — the higher the rate, the greater the incentive for evasion — and also the problem of regressivity, putting the largest burdens on the lowest incomes.

I have argued in the past that conservatives should adopt the principle of progressivity as much as possible. The problem of “what to do with the pooris as old as government itself. Instead of pretending the problem doesn’t exist, conservatives would do well to have their own, conservative-themed solution. Democrats promise government services and welfare, and we should recognize that that has had some success. So what should the conservative solution be? Even the most libertarian thinker can agree that, if you have no better solution – don’t take their money!

I conclude that the problem with the Fair Tax is much the same as the problem with the Flat Tax — by itself, it can’t generate enough revenue without becoming a caricature of the original principle.

Thus, it seems to me that the way forward would be to combine each of these systems: a flat tax of about 16% with a basic exemption that leaves the lowest incomes tax-free; no separate payroll taxes; and a national sales tax or VAT of perhaps 10%, which would work out to more like 20% when you include state-level sales taxes. Yes, you would have some danger of rising tax rates over time, but every tax system has that danger.

Personally, I would go with a national energy tax instead of a national sales tax: something in the realm of $1 per gallon of gasoline, or the equivalent on natural gas, coal and so forth. I calculate that this would produce about $1,035 billion of revenue per year at today’s rate of usage, or about 6.9% of GDP. If we add that to Hong Kong’s 13% revenue/GDP from its 16% flat tax, we get 19.9% of GDP, which is pretty close to our 18.5% bogey. (In practice, higher taxes on energy would result in less usage, so revenue would probably be a little lower.)

Yes, I know this is Al Gore’s idea. So?

One nice thing about an energy tax is that it would reduce our reliance on foreign oil and environmentally-destructive energy practices. The other nice thing is that it is easy to avoidjust use less energy. Those with the lowest incomes can find a way to avoid much of it, by turning down their thermostat and commuting by bicycle, while those with higher incomes can keep their heated swimming pools, Range Rovers and private yachts if they want to. Thus, I think it would have a natural progressivity, to counteract the regressivity inherent in a sales tax.

When you consider that people with lower incomes would no longer be paying payroll taxes, would be partially exempt from income taxes, and would be able to easily avoid the energy tax, we can see that their overall tax burden could be significantly reduced.

Another question is whether tax revenue of 26.9% of GDP (federal, state and local) in the U.S. is really what we want.  Singapore gets by on 14.2% of GDP, but still manages to provide all the services common to developed countries everywhere, including a universal health care system for all citizens.

After experimenting with minimalist government in the 19th century, and big government in the 20th, I think we will ideally migrate toward a solution that combines the best of both. In simple numbers, it would mean tax revenues of about 15%-20% of GDP. Let’s just take a midpoint number of 18%.

Out of this 18%, about 6% would cover state and local governments (police, fire, schools, roads), and 12% would go to the federal government. The federal budget would look something like this: 3% universal healthcare (the amount spent by Hong Kong and Singapore on their universal healthcare systems), 3% senior income insurance (replacement of Social Security), 2% defense, and 4% everything else.

As the need to raise tax revenue diminishes, the tax systems and tax rates themselves can become simpler and less burdensome.

Already Herman Cain is moving somewhat in this direction with his “999 Plan,” which he says is a combination of both “flat tax” and “fair taxideas. I think it is still a rather rough proposal, but it is enough to start a discussion. Voters realize that, by the time it went through Congress, some of the more problematic elements would be tweaked and fixed. The important thing is that he would be getting the process started. Maybe that’s why the pizza guy is rising in the polls?



Nathan Lewis

   

 

 

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Nathan Lewis was formerly the chief international economist of a firm that provided investment research for institutions. He now works for an asset management company based in New York. Lewis has written for the Financial Times, Asian Wall Street Journal, Japan Times, Pravda, and other publications. He has appeared on financial television in the United States, Japan, and the Middle East.
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In California we are already paying somewhere around 73 cents per gallon of gas, some of it state tax and some federal tax, but Californians still drive more than anyone else in the nation. The biggest danger in raising tax on anything that we would like to reduce consumption of is that once government gets used to that income they will never let it go away. This has already happened with gasoline in California. (See Grey Davis in "Who Killed the Electric Car). California has the highest gasoline tax in the nation and the worst public transit.
An Argument Against US Federal Flat Tax Today... First three definitions. Definition 1 - US Federal Government, current iteration of 250 year old ongoing surge, which seeks to propel United States citizens into their better prosperity and posterity. Definition 2 - Economics, the study of applying ways and means to both dearth and want. Definition 3 - Vortex Economy, an economy cruising for substantial change, Aristotlian notion, via debt, deficit, and lack of will regards spending and changing opportune to the dearth of any functionalism, now bereft, that could be proferred for its purpose. Now the central Theorem. In a Vortex Economy, a flat tax is thus a one way ticket; it is a Reaver's move and so undesirable today. Proof of Central Theorem. Yeah I know about flat tax. I'm like the guy who bought high with Obama. Now I'm going to buy low with so and so. Did you make any money, sir? Money? What's money? And so it will be. Flat tax is a one way ticket. At least future misery will have tremendous company. Argument follows from so called "stability" of flat tax. Here, as incomes fall, citizens take the hit - the tax takes more from their net. This is called non-elastic and is fine as long as revenues find some notion of government expenditure. But, when the government bill passes beyond the pale of economic reasoning; i.e., dole replaces choice in analysis, and further hard time so follow, the true regressive nature of the flat tax finds the fore. When new revenues are demanded to confront burgeoning misury, the raise to flat tax required now already sits atop ongoing marginal burdening regards the citizens who already suffered defacto tax increases as their incomes fell. True context is today fabulously paramount. But true context finds the nation in a vortex economy. q.e.d. Cororally to central Theorem. In a Vortex Economy any revenue adjustment scheme must tandem with other policy and technological innovation to retrieve the economic field itself from dearth of choice. Argument follows from current debt load of every man, woman, and child in America, which is backbreaking if enforced (of course this can only be conjectured, specific private citizens didn't sign for the debt). As a consequence adjusting revenue alone won't change the field in the required way. q.e.d. Note: argument presumes a kind of Dred Scott house rules, which follow posthumous from word and deed. In other words, being born in or living in an indentured state (as opposed to a free one, which is no longer in question) does not by judicial decree at least in the United States declare a particular person to be so indentured. It just makes it harder to get productive things done.
The author is not completely informed on the Fair Tax. He fails to discuss the vital component of tax 'pre-bates', which are monies rebated in advance to every citizen in the amount of the tax rate multiplied by the average cost of living expenses- food, shelter. Lower income individuals do not pay taxes. All the visiting foreigners will be effectively sponsoring our entitlement programs to some extent, where they are not now, as their expenditures are currently only taxed at a menial level. Those that spend money on expensive items-yachts, etc from inherited wealth will contribute significantly, where they do not now.

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In California we are already paying somewhere around 73 cents per gallon of gas, some of it state tax and some federal tax, but Californians still drive more than anyone else in the nation. The biggest danger in raising tax on anything that we would lik  Read more
K. - 10/20/2011 at 7:02 PM GMT
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