Saint Peter
shoots left
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2002
- Posts
- 94,048
I cannot wait for my first Prekbate check.
That one is going for some over priced knives.
That one is going for some over priced knives.
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But since my sides are already hurting for laughing...
Where did you "dream up" that $1.30?
If you want to get any sort of fair-tax proposal through the congress, it must include a "soak the rich" provision of some kind or another. The "prebate" simply is not enough to cover that necessity. Given the political climate in the U.S., and the fact that our president rarely speaks of economics without using the term "fat cat", you can be assured that the only possible way a national sales tax will be implemented is as an additional tax on top of the payroll and income taxes.
Much of the objection appears to hinge on the belief that retail prices will not drop should Fair Tax replace payroll and income taxes as the primary federal taxation mechanism. Apparently there is a belief that retail prices for goods other than gasoline do not include the cost of payroll taxes, income taxes and regulatory fees that a manufacturer pays in the creation of their product.
To an extent, they are correct, as a lag between passage and price changes (as suppliers cash flow situation adapts to the new tax plan) - would for some time make it appear as if they are simply taking an additional 30% profit (as many would).
I also have difficulty believing that many service industries (law, accounting, cleaners, etc...) will drop their fees when the payroll taxes disappear. I do believe they will simply add 23% on top of their current rates and enjoy the bonus.
But as para 1 states - The Citizens of The U.S.A., have declared that they want something for nothing and elected those who believe the rich can pay for it all. There is no possibility of a tax which the rich can treat as, "voluntary" coming into existence. Until they have an "alternative minimum purchases" provision, it's not possible.
The legislation clearly states the the 23% will be applied to the suggested retail price and added to that price. That is the ONLY formula that applies, all else is bullshit. Ignorant bullshit engaged in by what might otherwise be considered reasonably intelligent people.
If the suggested retail price is $.77, then 23% of that price is indeed $.18 and when you add $.18 to $.77 you do indeed come up with a tax inclusive shelf price of $.95. That's it, end of story, no further discussion required. It operates exactly the same as the current crop of tax inclusive excise taxes.
The only people that seem to be befuddled by that simple calculation are those that are determined to apply methodolgies NOT specified by the legislation.
Ishmael
The legislation clearly states the the 23% will be applied to the suggested retail price and added to that price. That is the ONLY formula that applies, all else is bullshit. Ignorant bullshit engaged in by what might otherwise be considered reasonably intelligent people.
Here's what the House version of the Fair Tax says:
‘(a) In General- There is hereby imposed a tax on the use or consumption in the United States of taxable property or services.
‘(b) Rate-
16
‘(1) FOR 2011- In the calendar year 2011, the rate of tax is 23 percent of the gross payments for the taxable property or service.
Well, would you look at that? It says what I said it did, and not what you just said. What are the odds of THAT happening?
Apparently though, Ish and Frisco are not alone...
"The 23 percent number in H.R. 25 is the equivalent of the 4.8 percent in the previous example. To calculate the real rate of the sales tax, we have to determine the original purchase price of an item. We can begin with the same $100 item, keeping in mind that a price tag that reads $100 has sales tax already built in. If our tax rate is 23 percent of the tax-inclusive sales price, then of the $100 final price, $23 of those dollars will be for taxes, meaning that the original pre-tax price of the item is $77. To get $23 in taxes on a $77 item, one must impose a 30 percent tax. In other words, a 23 percent sales tax on the tax-inclusive sales price is equivalent to a 30 percent tax on the actual price of the item.
FairTax proponents object to the 30 percent number, claiming that critics use the larger number to frighten people. Americans for Fair Taxation claims that it uses the tax-inclusive number to make it easier to compare the FairTax to the income tax that it will replace (since most of us think of income tax rates on an inclusive basis). But we are not accustomed to thinking of sales taxes inclusively. The result is that many FairTax supporters (about 15 percent of those who wrote to us, for example) do not understand that the 23 percent figure is tax inclusive.
Our analysis of the FairTax used a figure of 34 percent as the basic exclusive tax rate. One e-mailer complained that our number was at least 10 percentage points “higher than [the FairTax] is” because we calculated it as an addition to retail prices. But our 34 percent number is not 10 percentage points higher than the legislation. A 34 percent exclusive number is equivalent to a 25 percent tax inclusive rate – only 2 percentage points higher than the FairTax bill. We think that, intentional or not, the use of the tax-inclusive 23 percent rate has misled a lot of FairTax proponents."
http://www.factcheck.org/taxes/unspinning_the_fairtax.html
Your an idiot, I posted the legislation long ago.
Ishmael
Your an idiot, I posted the legislation long ago.
Ishmael
If you want to get any sort of fair-tax proposal through the congress, it must include a "soak the rich" provision of some kind or another. The "prebate" simply is not enough to cover that necessity. Given the political climate in the U.S., and the fact that our president rarely speaks of economics without using the term "fat cat", you can be assured that the only possible way a national sales tax will be implemented is as an additional tax on top of the payroll and income taxes.
Much of the objection appears to hinge on the belief that retail prices will not drop should Fair Tax replace payroll and income taxes as the primary federal taxation mechanism. Apparently there is a belief that retail prices for goods other than gasoline do not include the cost of payroll taxes, income taxes and regulatory fees that a manufacturer pays in the creation of their product.
To an extent, they are correct, as a lag between passage and price changes (as suppliers cash flow situation adapts to the new tax plan) - would for some time make it appear as if they are simply taking an additional 30% profit (as many would).
I also have difficulty believing that many service industries (law, accounting, cleaners, etc...) will drop their fees when the payroll taxes disappear. I do believe they will simply add 23% on top of their current rates and enjoy the bonus.
But as para 1 states - The Citizens of The U.S.A., have declared that they want something for nothing and elected those who believe the rich can pay for it all. There is no possibility of a tax which the rich can treat as, "voluntary" coming into existence. Until they have an "alternative minimum purchases" provision, it's not possible.
If a product costs $1 at retail, the FairTax adds 30%, for a total of $1.30. Since the 30-cent tax is 23% of $1.30, FairTax supporters say the rate is 23% rather than 30%.
Spin that. Try using facts in your answer this time.
UnSpinning The FairTax reports that 15% of all FairTax supporters suffer from "AJ-itis", a pathological inability to recognize that at 23% "tax inclusive" rate translates to a 30% "tax exclusive" rate (the rate actually paid at the cashier).
Spin that one too, AJ.
Awww...so disappointed...it's been more than an hour, and there's been no attempt by the deluded to explain that:
- a correct understanding of the law is wrong
- in incorrect understanding is right (with no proof, of course)
- a personal insult.
I'm deluded?
You're all over the map and not paying any attention to substantive refutations of that which you keep positing...
You've turned a simple .23¢ on the dollar to all sorts of meaningless percentages which is now, not only comparing apples to oranges but adding mangos, bananas, and Elton John...
So, you're making it up.
Gotcha...
lol
At some point, you need to stop embarrassing yourself. It's not quite like denying that 2 + 2 = 4, but it is still denying basic mathematics.
Go fuck yourself Dicklick.
Ishmael
Yes, I think you are deluded.
But if you're not, you should be able to cite at least one non-Frisco, non-Ishmael source that agrees with you on how the Fair Tax works, since I've posted a few, including the law itself and the fair tax website, that say it doesn't work like that. Which you apparently think of as fruit salad. (But at least it's not global warming.)
Go ahead, let's see your substantive refutation. Link to it, if it's in this thread, using the criteria that it can't be something made up.
This pretty much sums up why it's not easy bein' AJ:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_cBkbdLQJPmM/RsSCYZoJgMI/AAAAAAAAAHA/K3SPENoWf-o/s1600/red_sky_ufo3.jpg
I did. You poo-poo'd the source. Then you quoted it in rebuttal...
When I quoted Throb's source in rebuttal you blasted me for the source being biased.
For me, it's turned into a lose-lose situation.
Again, if Throb were my ally, I'd re-check my premises...
Sure you did. What reply was that, again?
Ishmael isn't exactly a high-demand wingman.
Just sayin'.
That you can calculate the Fairtax percentage two ways (or your newest third way, or, like Throb, you can just pull a $1.30% OUT OF THIN AIR), but no matter which percentage you like for display purposes, the dollar amount collected remains the same...