Byron In Exile
Frederick Fucking Chopin
- Joined
- May 3, 2002
- Posts
- 66,591
Government cheese is real cheese.Government cheese or real cheese nachos?
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Government cheese is real cheese.Government cheese or real cheese nachos?
You mean cheddah or American...
It's not yo's!
Government cheese is real cheese.
Chinese cheese.
Just like Swiss without all of that nasty Nazi gold mixed in.
Government cheese is real cheese.
Your nacho stands once graced the plains of the GB.What the fuck do you know about a decent order of nachos?
Bad math with it's first poor assumption being a zero-sum game. First off, most of the "rich" don't pay annual "income" taxes, capital gains, maybe...
This way they do pay taxes even in those years when they don't have Bill Ayers write their books.
Then, let's look at the money that comes back on-shore (and the companies that will relocate headquarters and factories to be more competitive) when the rich no longer have to hide it or flee. Then you have more rich paying more taxes, maybe proportionately not as much, you ol' envious type keeping his eye on that sort o'thingy, would like but in volume, more...
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Throb, I would be for a flat tax too except for one thing.Lets look at some examples
Example 1: Current system
$40,000 Land cost (25%)
$48,000 Labor cost (30%)
$32,000 Material cost (20%)
$40,000 Misc overhead/compliance cost (25%)
===================================
$160,000 total cost of building house
The builder typically has gross profit margin of 20% :$40,000
The house would then be priced at $200,000
So Joe Homebuyer pays $200K, gets the homeowner deduction and builder gets $40K
Example 2: Flat tax
$40,000 Land cost (25%) (unchanged)
$33,600 Labor cost ($48,000 reduced by 30% flat tax)
$22,400 Material cost ($32,000 reduced by 30% flat tax)
$36,000 Misc overhead/compliance cost (compliance costs won't go away totally, I'll be generous and knock 10% of $40,000 due to flat tax)
===================================
$132,000 total cost of building house
The builder still has gross profit margin of 20% :$26,400
This makes the pre-tax price of the house $158,400
Add the 30% flat tax and you have a house priced at $205,920
So Joe Homebuyer pays $205K, gets NO homeowner deduction and builder gets $26K
So the homebuyer pays MORE, the builder makes LESS and the flat tax proponents claim this is a GOOD thing?
Must be something in the "mathmatical" sic calculations I am missing.
That's how our present system started....
I don't dispute your math, I distrust the vehicle.
But I could go for it over what we have now. Agreed?
You're not making sense. Again. Or should I say "still"?
We know income taxes are paid by the top brackets, yes?
"# The top 1 percent of taxpayers paid 33.7 percent of all individual income taxes in 2002. This group of taxpayers has paid more than 30 percent of individual income taxes since 1995. Moreover, since 1990 this group’s tax share has grown faster than their income share.
."
http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/incometaxandtheirs/a/whopaysmost.htm
However, in 2000, which was a big year for capital gains as these things go, capital gains accounted for only 12% of income taxes. So even if all of these were for the top 1%, which they clearly weren't, then the top 1% would still be paying about twice as much in earned income taxes as capital gains.
http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=3856&type=0
So the sheltering income from taxes thing isn't going so well from them.
For the minuscule percentage that does go offshore, bringing it back onshore won't produce any more tax revenues since income wouldn't be taxed. But, if they could find a way to shelter income from taxes, surely they can find a way to shield an offshore purchase from taxes. That's got to be easier.
When each citizen gets to keep his entire paycheck, then each citizen has increased spending power, this too will grow the pie. As I have shown MANY times mathematically, when you take the 23% overhead out of the cost of producing your good and then taxing it at 23% then the cost of that good actually goes down, this too increases purchasing power and increases economic activity thusly again growing the pie.
Back in 2005, Frisco Slug_Esq (then posting as ********) agreed with me that the UnFairTax would give less money to home builders.
You really should get out of your grandma's basement more often.
The "rich" pay most of the federal income taxes, the percentage depending on where you think "rich" starts.
The "rich" also bankrolled the "fair" tax, because they consume less of their income on a proportional basis so come out ahead if consumption is taxed, rather than income.
And if the rich come out ahead, and it's revenue-neutral, then somebody is paying more.
While you're figuring out what went on with the end of this post, let me point out how proponents love to double count something here...
They claim that, e.g. building a house, that labor will cost less because we're removing the 22%+ taxes on that labor. Well...a big part of that 22% is the difference between an employees net and gross income. If we're removing that, it means we are paying employees closer to their net income, so they're taking a big pay cut. (Meaning their new gross and net are like their old net, and smaller than their old gross.)
Yet everything they buy...food, rent, clothing...costs 30% more.
I don't think people want to take a pay cut and then pay 30% more.
Even with a prebate.
First of all the 'rich' that you speak of are actually businesses. The taxes that they pay are nothing more than the taxes that they collected on behalf of the government and those taxes have always come primarily from the middle class. There is no great secret or conspiracy here, it has always been thus.
You have conitually railed against the Fair Tax on the premise that the middle class will pay proportionatley more. The fact of the matter is that they will be paying the same as they were paying before, the difference that you see in the figures you post are merely a change in the method of accounting. The 20 to 30% tax that is embedded in everything you buy evaporates and that tax that you see being shifted to the middle class is a clearer reflection of reality than that which currently exists. In other words the middle class is being taxed no more or less than it was before it is merely that those taxes are now visible. I would think that most people would see that as a good thing as opposed to prefering that the government engage in slight of hand. On the other hand I suppose there is a segment of the population that really likes to be fooled.
Further, dwelling on that point ignores all of the other very real benefits of the Fair Tax with regards to the overall economy and the resurrection of real manufacturing in the US and continues to foster the class warfare that feeds the political class. Divide et imperum.
Ishmael
How many years has it been that the proponents of the "FairTax" have been trying to convince Americans that it's a good idea?
I addressed this issue with you years ago Cap'n Pavlov. All you do is echo Boortz's misinformation and ignore the facts.
Only a few of which are :
Any "sales tax" with a rate over 10% has been subject historically to rampant avoidance, studies have shown that the "FairTax" would be much more than 10% to remain revenue neutral. Avoidance schemes and black market deals would rule the day.
The "Fairtax" can only remain "revenue neutral" at the rate it's proponents claim if all social services are slashed to the bone and the federal government were reduced to nearly nothing. As if that would ever happen. Not to mention that there is no mention in the "fairtax" proposal of repealing the income tax, or of making it impossible to re-introduce at a later time in addition to the "FairTax".
The Fairtax would impact the middle class to a much larger extent than any of its proponents will admit. Many things that are currently not subject to sales tax, unprepared foods, medicine, insurance premiums, would be subject to the "FairTax".
The removal of capital gains taxes are a boon to those who can afford to invest heavily, again a bonus to the very wealthy and next to nothing for the middle class.
It sounds good to tell someone that they would take home ALL of the money they make every week (minus insurance premiums and various other non tax related expenses), but it's another thing entirely if you also tell them that prices on most things that they buy are going to be impacted by an "inclusive" tax.. The "inclusive" rate is used because it sounds like it's less than if they used the "exclusive" tax rate, the way normal sales tax is figured.
I told you years ago, the only people who support the "FairTax" are the very wealthy, and the very stupid. I'l leave it up to others to decide on which side of that fence you fall.
No, goods will cost less. Take an onerous 30% tax rate for easier math. The FairTax is the result of a blind research into a better system of taxation (ironically, the people who paid for the research were flat-taxers hoping to have their position vindicated, and it wasn't and as businessmen, they decided not to hold fast to their desire, but to go with the best idea) where the 23% they calculate is the BUILT-IN cost due to the overwhelming tax code in every product or service (it's an average, obviously.)
$1.00 - $0.30 = $0.70 the new cost of the "widget."
$0.70*.30 = $0.21
Thus the Fairtax widget will cost $0.91
This is a benefit to the worker who adds the savings to his ENTIRE paycheck and prebate check.
Actually, the employee is getting a huge raise on every level. This increases his spending power and this increases, yes, TAX REVENUE...
Everyone can afford to buy more widgets. AND we WILL! We're Americans damnit!
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Mr. Wizard,
You're trying to make money by making math mistakes.
Nobody thinks there is 30% hidden tax in everything. Even the simplest minded think it's like 23%. So your $.70 is really $.77, and your new cost is $.77 + 30% of that ($.23) = $1.00.
And that of course assumes that everything involved in making the widget goes down 23%, and businesses think it's a great idea to reduce their gross receipts by 23%, even though they still need to repay their capital costs at the previous schedules.
Go back and quote my subsequent answers. Don't cherry-pick...
I do remember dealing with that point in a much more substantial manner.
I believe it is one of the points specifically addressed in the FairTax book.
I said I was using 30 so we could do the math in our head...
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So, when you use your calculator and .23, you still see a savings.
And when your widgets are cheaper...
YOU SELL MORE WIDGETS!
ESPECIALLY since the buyers now have more purchasing power.
Well, except that:
a) the widgets cost the consumer the same final amount, so no more purchasing power, and
b) that assumes the costs go down, which most people who look at this think won't happen in the manner postulated.
Other than that, yeah, it's great.
No, the widgets are CHEAPER!
*sigh*
$1.00-$1.00*.23= $0.77
$0.77*.23= .1771
Fairtax Widget = $0.95