GasBandit
Staff member
The fair tax, by removing the embedded taxes, does not increase the actual, final purchase price. Moreover, no, it's been found that the magic number is 23%, not 30%.The fair tax is actually closer to 30% to equalize with current revenue streams. A sales tax of that kind drives a lot of business underground (which is almost never mentioned in arguments for such a huge consumption tax). I think a balance of income tax and sales tax is just fine.
The fair tax, by removing the embedded taxes, does not increase the actual, final purchase price! To say nothing of the business incentives of eliminating payroll, corporate, capital gains, etc taxes. As with most anything else, the states are little test laboratories for what we can do on a national/global scale. We've seen lately which states businesses would rather function in - there are several states that finance themselves with sales taxes instead of income taxes, and they have weathered the recession better. One of the major aims of the fair tax is to make the US a lot more enticing to business.And how would you collect sales tax from companies outside of the country? Wouldn't it just push internet companies into Canada and Mexico? Shipping from those countries would probably still be cheaper than paying a 25% tax on almost everything.
That's your answer for everything these days.There is no way i can tackle the number of assumptions made in that mess. Congratulations, you win by me not caring to spend all day refuting every assumption you made.