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Wikipedia

FairTax

FairTax is a single rate tax proposal which has been proposed as a bill in the United States Congress regularly since 2005 that includes complete dismantling of the Internal Revenue Service.[1] The proposal would eliminate all federal income taxes (including the alternative minimum tax, corporate income taxes, and capital gains taxes), payroll taxes (including Social Security and Medicare taxes), gift taxes, and estate taxes, replacing them with a single consumption tax on retail sales.

The proposed Fair Tax Act (H.R. 25/S. 18) would apply a tax, once, at the point of purchase on all new goods and services for personal consumption. The proposal also specified a monthly welfare payment for low-income earners to offset the regressive tax impact. This was styled by advocates as an "advance rebate", or "prebate", of tax on purchases up to the poverty level.[2][3] First introduced into the United States Congress in 1999, a number of congressional committees have heard testimony on the bill; however, it did not move from committee. A campaign in 2005 for the FairTax proposal[4] involved Leo E. Linbeck and the Fairtax.org. Talk radio personality Neal Boortz and Georgia Congressman John Linder published The FairTax Book in 2005 and additional visibility was gained in the 2008 presidential campaign.

As defined in the proposed legislation, the initial sales tax rate is 30% (i.e. a purchase of $100 would incur a sales tax of $30, resulting in a total price to the consumer of $130). Advocates promote this as a 23% tax inclusive rate based on the total amount paid including the tax, which is the method currently used to calculate income tax liability.[5] In subsequent years the rate could adjust annually based on federal receipts in the previous fiscal year.[6] With the rebate taken into consideration, the FairTax would be progressive on consumption,[3] but would still be regressive on income (since consumption as a percentage of income falls at higher income levels).[7][8] Opponents argue this would accordingly decrease the tax burden on high-income earners and increase it on the lower class earners.[5][9] Supporters contend that the plan would effectively tax wealth, increase purchasing power[10][11] and decrease tax burdens by broadening the tax base.

Advocates expect a consumption tax to increase savings and investment, ease tax compliance and increase economic growth, increase incentives for international business to locate in the US and increase US competitiveness in international trade.[12][13][14] The plan would provide transparency for funding the federal government. Supporters believe it would increase civil liberties, benefit the environment, and effectively tax illegal activity and undocumented immigrants.[12][15] Critics contend that a consumption tax of this size would be extremely difficult to collect, would lead to pervasive tax evasion,[5][7] and raise less revenue than the current tax system, leading to an increased budget deficit.[5][16] The proposed Fairtax might cause removal of tax deduction incentives, transition effects on after-tax savings, incentives on credit use and the loss of tax advantages to state and local bonds. It also includes a sunset clause if the 16th Amendment to the US Constitution is not repealed within seven years of its enactment.

Legislative overview and history edit

 
Rep John Linder holding the 133 page Fair Tax Act of 2007 in contrast to the then-current U.S. tax code and IRS regulations

The legislation would remove the Internal Revenue Service (after three years), and establish Excise Tax and Sales Tax bureaus in the Department of the Treasury.[17] The states are granted the primary authority for the collection of sales tax revenues and the remittance of such revenues to the Treasury. The plan was created by Americans For Fair Taxation, an advocacy group formed to change the tax system. The group states that, together with economists, it developed the plan and the name "Fair Tax", based on interviews, polls, and focus groups of the general public.[5] The FairTax legislation has been introduced in the House by Georgia Republicans John Linder (1999–2010) and Rob Woodall (2011–2014),[18] while being introduced in the Senate by Georgia Republican Saxby Chambliss (2003–2014).

Linder first introduced the Fair Tax Act (H.R. 2525) on July 14, 1999, to the 106th United States Congress and a substantially similar bill has been reintroduced in each subsequent session of Congress. The bill attracted a total of 56 House and Senate cosponsors in the 108th Congress,[19][20] 61 in the 109th,[21][22] 76 in the 110th,[23][24] 70 in the 111th,[25][26] 78 in the 112th,[27][28] 83 in the 113th (H.R. 25/S. 122), 81 in the 114th (H.R. 25/S. 155), 51 in the 115th (H.R. 25/S. 18), 33 in the 116th (H.R. 25), and 30 in the 117th (H.R. 25). Former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert (Republican) had cosponsored the bill in the 109th–110th Congress, but it has not received support from the Democratic leadership.[22][23][29] Democratic Representative Collin Peterson of Minnesota and Democratic Senator Zell Miller of Georgia cosponsored and introduced the bill in the 108th Congress, but Peterson has left the House of Representatives and Miller has left the Senate.[19][20] In the 109th–111th Congress, Representative Dan Boren was the only Democrat to cosponsor the bill.[21][23] A number of congressional committees have heard testimony on the FairTax, but it has not moved from committee since its introduction in 1999. The legislation was also discussed with President George W. Bush and his Secretary of the Treasury Henry M. Paulson.[30]

To become law, the bill will need to be included in a final version of tax legislation from the U.S. House Committee on Ways and Means, pass both the House and the Senate, and finally be signed by the President. In 2005, President Bush established an advisory panel on tax reform that examined several national sales tax variants including aspects of the FairTax and noted several concerns. These included uncertainties as to the revenue that would be generated, and difficulties of enforcement and administration, which made this type of tax undesirable to recommend in their final report.[9] The panel did not examine the FairTax as proposed in the legislation. The FairTax received visibility in the 2008 presidential election on the issue of taxes and the IRS, with several candidates supporting the bill.[31][32] A poll in 2009 by Rasmussen Reports found that 43% of Americans would support a national sales tax replacement, with 38% opposed to the idea; the sales tax was viewed as fairer by 52% of Republicans, 44% of Democrats, and 49% of unaffiliateds.[33] President Barack Obama did not support the bill,[34] arguing for more progressive changes to the income and payroll tax systems. President Donald Trump proposed to lower overall income taxation and reduce the number of tax brackets from seven to three.

Tax rate edit

The sales tax rate, as defined in the legislation for the first year, is 23% of the total payment including the tax ($23 of every $100 spent in total—calculated similar to income taxes). This would be equivalent to a 30% traditional U.S. sales tax ($23 on top of every $77 spent—$100 total, or $30 on top of every $100 spent—$130 total).[5] After the first year of implementation, this rate is automatically adjusted annually using a predefined formula reflecting actual federal receipts in the previous fiscal year.

The effective tax rate for any household would be variable due to the fixed monthly tax rebate that are used to rebate taxes paid on purchases up to the poverty level.[3] The tax would be levied on all U.S. retail sales for personal consumption on new goods and services. Critics argue that the sales tax rate defined in the legislation would not be revenue neutral (that is, it would collect less for the government than the current tax system), and thus would increase the budget deficit, unless government spending were equally reduced.[5]

Sales tax rate edit

During the first year of implementation, the FairTax legislation would apply a 23% federal retail sales tax on the total transaction value of a purchase; in other words, consumers pay to the government 23 cents of every dollar spent in total (sometimes called tax-inclusive, and presented this way to provide a direct comparison with individual income and employment taxes which reduce a person's available money before they can make purchases). The equivalent assessed tax rate is 30% if the FairTax is applied to the pre-tax price of a good like traditional U.S. state sales taxes (sometimes called tax-exclusive; this rate is not directly comparable with existing income and employment taxes).[5] After the first year of implementation, this tax rate would be automatically adjusted annually using a formula specified in the legislation that reflects actual federal receipts in the previous fiscal year.[6]

Effective tax rate edit

A household's effective tax rate on consumption would vary with the annual expenditures on taxable items and the fixed monthly tax rebate. The rebate would have the greatest effect at low spending levels, where they could lower a household's effective rate to zero or below.[10] The lowest effective tax rate under the FairTax could be negative due to the rebate for households with annual spending amounts below poverty level spending for a specified household size. At higher spending levels, the rebate has less impact, and a household's effective tax rate would approach 23% of total spending.[10] A person spending at the poverty level would have an effective tax rate of 0%, whereas someone spending at four times the poverty level would have an effective tax rate of 17.2%. Buying or otherwise receiving items and services not subject to federal taxation (such as a used home or car) can contribute towards a lower effective tax rate. The total amount of spending and the proportion of spending allocated to taxable items would determine a household's effective tax rate on consumption. If a rate is calculated on income, instead of the tax base, the percentage could exceed the statutory tax rate in a given year.

Monthly tax rebate edit

Proposed 2015 FairTax Prebate Schedule[35]
One adult household Two adult household
Family
Size
Annual
Consumption
Allowance
Annual
Prebate
Monthly
Prebate
Family
Size
Annual
Consumption
Allowance
Annual
Prebate
Monthly
Prebate
1 person $11,770 $2,707 $226 couple $23,540 $5,414 $451
and 1 child $15,930 $3,664 $305 and 1 child $27,700 $6,371 $531
and 2 children $20,090 $4,621 $385 and 2 children $31,860 $7,328 $611
and 3 children $24,250 $5,578 $465 and 3 children $36,020 $8,285 $690
and 4 children $28,410 $6,534 $545 and 4 children $40,180 $9,241 $770
and 5 children $32,570 $7,491 $624 and 5 children $44,340 $10,198 $850
and 6 children $36,490 $8,393 $699 and 6 children $48,500 $11,155 $930
and 7 children $40,890 $9,405 $784 and 7 children $52,660 $12,112 $1,009
The annual consumption allowance is based on the 2015 DHHS Poverty Guidelines as published in the Federal Register, January 22, 2015. There is no marriage penalty as the couple amount is twice the amount that a single adult receives. For families/households with more than 8 persons, add $4,160 to the annual consumption allowance for each additional person. The annual consumption allowance is the amount of spending that is "untaxed" under the FairTax.

Under the FairTax, family households of lawful U.S. residents would be eligible to receive a "Family Consumption Allowance" (FCA) based on family size (regardless of income) that is equal to the estimated total FairTax paid on poverty level spending according to the poverty guidelines published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.[2] The FCA is a tax rebate (known as a "prebate" as it would be an advance) paid in twelve monthly installments, adjusted for inflation. The rebate is meant to eliminate the taxation of household necessities and make the plan progressive.[5] Households would register once a year with their sales tax administering authority, providing the names and social security numbers of each household member.[2] The Social Security Administration would disburse the monthly rebate payments in the form of a paper check via U.S. Mail, an electronic funds transfer to a bank account, or a "smartcard" that can be used like a debit card.[2]

Opponents of the plan criticize this tax rebate due to its costs. Economists at the Beacon Hill Institute estimated the overall rebate cost to be $489 billion (assuming 100% participation).[36] In addition, economist Bruce Bartlett has argued that the rebate would create a large opportunity for fraud,[37] treats children disparately, and would constitute a welfare payment regardless of need.[38]

The President's Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform cited the rebate as one of their chief concerns when analyzing their national sales tax, stating that it would be the largest entitlement program in American history, and contending that it would "make most American families dependent on monthly checks from the federal government".[9][39] Estimated by the advisory panel at approximately $600 billion, "the Prebate program would cost more than all budgeted spending in 2006 on the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Education, Energy, Homeland Security, Housing and Urban Development, and Interior combined."[9] Proponents point out that income tax deductions, tax preferences, loopholes, credits, etc. under the current system was estimated at $945 billion by the Joint Committee on Taxation.[36] They argue this is $456 billion more than the FairTax "entitlement" (tax refund) would spend to cover each person's tax expenses up to the poverty level. In addition, it was estimated for 2005 that the Internal Revenue Service was already sending out $270 billion in refund checks.[36]

Presentation of tax rate edit

 
Mathematically, a 23% tax out of $100 yields approximately the same as a 30% tax on $77.

Sales and income taxes behave differently due to differing definitions of tax base, which can make comparisons between the two confusing. Under the existing individual income plus employment (Social Security; Medicare; Medicaid) tax formula, taxes to be paid are included in the base on which the tax rate is imposed (known as tax-inclusive). If an individual's gross income is $100 and the sum of their income plus employment tax rate is 23%, taxes owed equals $23. Traditional state sales taxes are imposed on a tax base equal to the pre-tax portion of a good's price (known as tax-exclusive). A good priced at $77 with a 30% sales tax rate yields $23 in taxes owed. To adjust an inclusive rate to an exclusive rate, divide the given rate by one minus that rate (i.e.   ).

The FairTax statutory rate, unlike most U.S. state-level sales taxes, is presented on a tax base that includes the amount of FairTax paid. For example, a final after-tax price of $100 includes $23 of taxes. Although no such requirement is included in the text of the legislation, Congressman John Linder has stated that the FairTax would be implemented as an inclusive tax, which would include the tax in the retail price, not added on at checkout—an item on the shelf for five dollars would be five dollars total.[30][40] The legislation requires the receipt to display the tax as 23% of the total.[41] Linder states the FairTax is presented as a 23% tax rate for easy comparison to income and employment tax rates (the taxes it would be replacing). The plan's opponents call the semantics deceptive. FactCheck called the presentation misleading, saying that it hides the real truth of the tax rate.[42] Bruce Bartlett stated that polls show tax reform support is extremely sensitive to the proposed rate,[38] and called the presentation confusing and deceptive based on the conventional method of calculating sales taxes.[43] Proponents believe it is both inaccurate and misleading to say that an income tax is 23% and the FairTax is 30% as it implies that the sales tax burden is higher.

Revenue neutrality edit

A key question surrounding the FairTax is whether the tax has the ability to be revenue-neutral; that is, whether the tax would result in an increase or reduction in overall federal tax revenues. Economists, advisory groups, and political advocacy groups disagree about the tax rate required for the FairTax to be truly revenue-neutral. Various analysts use different assumptions, time-frames, and methods resulting in dramatically different tax rates making direct comparison among the studies difficult. The choice between static or dynamic scoring further complicates any estimate of revenue-neutral rates.[44]

A 2006 study published in Tax Notes by the Beacon Hill Institute at Suffolk University and Dr. Laurence Kotlikoff estimated the FairTax would be revenue-neutral for the tax year 2007 at a rate of 23.82% (31.27% tax-exclusive).[45] The study states that purchasing power is transferred to state and local taxpayers from state and local governments. To recapture the lost revenue, state and local governments would have to raise tax rates or otherwise change tax laws in order to continue collecting the same real revenues from their taxpayers.[39][45] The Argus Group and Arduin, Laffer & Moore Econometrics each published an analysis that defended the 23% rate.[46][47][48] While proponents of the FairTax concede that the above studies did not explicitly account for tax evasion, they also claim that the studies did not altogether ignore tax evasion under the FairTax. These studies presumably incorporated some degree of tax evasion in their calculations by using National Income and Product Account based figures, which is argued to understate total household consumption.[45] The studies also did not account for capital gains that may be realized by the U.S. government if consumer prices were allowed to rise, which would reduce the real value of nominal U.S. government debt.[45] Nor did these studies account for any increased economic growth that many economists researching the plan believe would occur.[45][48][49][50]

In contrast to the above studies, William G. Gale of the Brookings Institution published a study in Tax Notes that estimated a rate of 28.2% (39.3% tax-exclusive) for 2007 assuming full taxpayer compliance and an average rate of 31% (44% tax-exclusive) from 2006 to 2015 (assumes that the Bush tax cuts expire on schedule and accounts for the replacement of an additional $3 trillion collected through the Alternative Minimum Tax).[5][16][51] The study also concluded that if the tax base were eroded by 10% due to tax evasion, tax avoidance, and/or legislative adjustments, the average rate would be 34% (53% tax-exclusive) for the 10-year period. A dynamic analysis in 2008 by the Baker Institute For Public Policy concluded that a 28% (38.9% tax-exclusive) rate would be revenue neutral for 2006.[52] The President's Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform performed a 2006 analysis to replace the individual and corporate income tax with a retail sales tax and estimated the rate to be 25% (34% tax-exclusive) assuming 15% tax evasion, and 33% (49% tax-exclusive) with 30% tax evasion.[9] The rate would need to be substantially higher to replace the additional taxes replaced by the FairTax (payroll, estate, and gift taxes). Beacon Hill Institute, FairTax.org, and Kotlikoff criticized the President's Advisory Panel's study as having allegedly altered the terms of the FairTax, using unsound methodology, and/or failing to fully explain their calculations.[36][45][53]

Taxable items and exemptions edit

The tax would be levied once at the final retail sale for personal consumption on new goods and services. Purchases of used items, exports and all business transactions would not be taxed. Also excluded are investments, such as purchases of stock, corporate mergers and acquisitions and capital investments. Savings and education tuition expenses would be exempt as they would be considered an investment (rather than final consumption).[54]

A good would be considered "used" and not taxable if a consumer already owns it before the FairTax takes effect or if the FairTax has been paid previously on the good, which may be different from the item being sold previously. Personal services such as health care, legal services, financial services, and auto repairs would be subject to the FairTax, as would renting apartments and other real property.[5] Food, clothing, prescription drugs, and medical services would be taxed. (State sales taxes generally exempt these types of basic-need items in an effort to reduce the tax burden on low-income families. The FairTax would use a monthly rebate system instead of the common state exclusions.) Internet purchases would be taxed, as would retail international purchases (such as a boat or car) that are imported to the United States (collected by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection).[54]

Distribution of tax burden edit

 
Working paper by Kotlikoff and Rapson[10] of the FairTax. Lower rates claimed on workers from a larger tax base, replacing regressive taxes, and wealth taxation.
 
President's Advisory Panel's analysis of a hybrid National Sales Tax. Higher rates claimed on the middle-class for an income tax replacement (excludes payroll, estate, and gift taxes replaced under the FairTax).

The FairTax's effect on the distribution of taxation or tax incidence (the effect on the distribution of economic welfare) is a point of dispute. The plan's supporters argue that the tax would broaden the tax base, that it would be progressive, and that it would decrease tax burdens and start taxing wealth (reducing the economic gap).[10] Opponents argue that a national sales tax would be inherently regressive and would decrease tax burdens paid by high-income individuals.[5][55] A person earning $2 million a year could live well spending $1 million, and as a result pay a mere 11% of that year's income in taxes.[5] Households at the lower end of the income scale spend almost all their income, while households at the higher end are more likely to devote a portion of income to saving. Therefore, according to economist William G. Gale, the percentage of income taxed is regressive at higher income levels (as consumption falls as a percentage of income).[7]

Income earned and saved would not be taxed until spent under the proposal. Households at the extreme high end of consumption often finance their purchases out of savings, not income.[7][38] Economist Laurence Kotlikoff states that the FairTax could make the tax system much more progressive and generationally equitable,[3] and argues that taxing consumption is effectively the same as taxing wages plus taxing wealth.[3] A household of three persons (this example will use two adults plus one child; the rebate does not consider marital status) spending $30,000 a year on taxable items would devote about 3.4% of total spending ([$6,900 tax minus $5,888 rebate]/$30,000 spending) to the FairTax after the rebate. The same household spending $125,000 on taxable items would spend around 18.3% ([$28,750 tax minus $5,888 rebate]/$125,000 spending) on the FairTax. At higher spending levels, the rebate has less impact and the rate approaches 23% of total spending. Thus, according to economist Laurence Kotlikoff, the effective tax rate is progressive on consumption.[3]

An unreviewed paper by Kotlikoff and David Rapson states that the FairTax would significantly reduce marginal taxes on work and saving, lowering overall average remaining lifetime tax burdens on current and future workers.[10][56] A study by Kotlikoff and Sabine Jokisch concluded that the long-term effects of the FairTax would reward low-income households with 26.3% more purchasing power, middle-income households with 12.4% more purchasing power, and high-income households with 5% more purchasing power.[11] The Beacon Hill Institute reported that the FairTax would make the federal tax system more progressive and would benefit the average individual in almost all expenditures deciles.[8] In another study, they state the FairTax would offer the broadest tax base (an increase of over $2 trillion), which allows the FairTax to have a lower tax rate than current tax law.[57]

Gale analyzed a national sales tax (though different from the FairTax in several aspects[8][46]) and reported that the overall tax burden on middle-income Americans would increase while the tax burden on the top 1% would drop.[7] A study by the Beacon Hill Institute reported that the FairTax may have a negative effect on the well-being of mid-income earners for several years after implementation.[50] According to the President's Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform report, which compared the individual and corporate income tax (excluding other taxes the FairTax replaces) to a sales tax with rebate,[9][36] the percentage of federal taxes paid by those earning from $15,000–$50,000 would rise from 3.6% to 6.7%, while the burden on those earning more than $200,000 would fall from 53.5% to 45.9%.[9] The report states that the top 5% of earners would see their burden decrease from 58.6% to 37.4%.[9][58] FairTax supporters argue that replacing the regressive payroll tax (a 15.3% total tax not included in the Tax Panel study;[9] payroll taxes include a 12.4% Social Security tax on wages up to $97,500 and a 2.9% Medicare tax, a 15.3% total tax that is often split between employee and employer) greatly changes the tax distribution, and that the FairTax would relieve the tax burden on middle-class workers.[3][53]

Predicted effects edit

The predicted effects of the FairTax are a source of disagreement among economists and other analysts.[42][43][55] According to Money magazine, while many economists and tax experts support the idea of a consumption tax, many of them view the FairTax proposal as having serious problems with evasion and revenue neutrality.[5] Some economists argue that a consumption tax (the FairTax is one such tax) would have a positive effect on economic growth, incentives for international business to locate in the U.S., and increased U.S. international competitiveness (border tax adjustment in global trade).[12][13][14] The FairTax would be tax-free on mortgage interest (up to a basic interest rate) and donations, but some lawmakers have concerns about losing tax incentives on home ownership and charitable contributions.[59] There is also concern about the effect on the income tax industry and the difficulty of repealing the Sixteenth Amendment (to prevent Congress from re-introducing an income tax).[60]

Economic edit

Americans For Fair Taxation states the FairTax would boost the United States economy and offers a letter signed by eighty economists, including Nobel Laureate Vernon L. Smith, that have endorsed the plan.[13] The Beacon Hill Institute estimated that within five years real GDP would increase 10.7% over the current system, domestic investment by 86.3%, capital stock by 9.3%, employment by 9.9%, real wages by 10.2%, and consumption by 1.8%.[50] Arduin, Laffer & Moore Econometrics projected the economy as measured by GDP would be 2.4% higher in the first year and 11.3% higher by the 10th year than it would otherwise be.[48] Economists Laurence Kotlikoff and Sabine Jokisch reported the incentive to work and save would increase; by 2030, the economy's capital stock would increase by 43.7% over the current system, output by 9.4%, and real wages by 11.5%.[11] Economist John Golob estimates a consumption tax, like the FairTax, would bring long-term interest rates down by 25–35%.[61] An analysis in 2008 by the Baker Institute For Public Policy indicated that the plan would generate significant overall macroeconomic improvement in both the short and long-term, but warned of transitional issues.[52]

FairTax proponents argue that the proposal would provide tax burden visibility and reduce compliance and efficiency costs by 90%, returning a large share of money to the productive economy.[3] The Beacon Hill Institute concluded that the FairTax would save $346.51 billion in administrative costs and would be a much more efficient taxation system.[62] Bill Archer, former head of the House Ways and Means Committee, asked Princeton University Econometrics to survey 500 European and Asian companies regarding the effect on their business decisions if the United States enacted the FairTax. 400 of those companies stated they would build their next plant in the United States, and 100 companies said they would move their corporate headquarters to the United States.[63] Supporters argue that the U.S. has the highest combined statutory corporate income tax rate among OECD countries along with being the only country with no border adjustment element in its tax system.[64] Proponents state that because the FairTax eliminates corporate income taxes and is automatically border adjustable, the competitive tax advantage of foreign producers would be eliminated, immediately boosting U.S. competitiveness overseas and at home.[65]

Opponents point to a study commissioned by the National Retail Federation in 2000 that found a national sales tax bill filed by Billy Tauzin, the Individual Tax Freedom Act (H.R. 2717), would bring a three-year decline in the economy, a four-year decline in employment and an eight-year decline in consumer spending.[66] The Wall Street Journal columnist James Taranto states the FairTax is unsuited to take advantage of supply-side effects and would create a powerful disincentive to spend money.[55] John Linder states an estimated $11 trillion is held in foreign accounts (largely for tax purposes), which he states would be repatriated back to U.S. banks if the FairTax were enacted, becoming available to U.S. capital markets, bringing down interest rates, and otherwise promoting economic growth in the United States.[12] Attorney Allen Buckley states that a tremendous amount of wealth was already repatriated under law changes in 2004 and 2005.[67] Buckley also argues that if the tax rate was significantly higher, the FairTax would discourage the consumption of new goods and hurt economic growth.[67]

Transition edit

 
Stability of the tax base: a comparison of personal consumption expenditures and adjusted gross income

During the transition, many or most of the employees of the IRS (105,978 in 2005)[68] would face loss of employment.[45] The Beacon Hill Institute estimate is that the federal government would be able to cut $8 billion from the IRS budget of $11.01 billion (in 2007), reducing the size of federal tax administration by 73%.[45] In addition, income tax preparers (many seasonal), tax lawyers, tax compliance staff in medium-to-large businesses, and software companies which sell tax preparation software could face significant drops, changes, or loss of employment. The bill would maintain the IRS for three years after implementation before completely decommissioning the agency, providing employees time to find other employment.[17]

In the period before the FairTax is implemented, there could be a strong incentive for individuals to buy goods without the sales tax using credit. After the FairTax is in effect, the credit could be paid off using untaxed payroll. If credit incentives do not change, opponents of the FairTax worry it could exacerbate an existing consumer debt problem. Proponents of the FairTax state that this effect could also allow individuals to pay off their existing (pre-FairTax) debt more quickly,[12] and studies suggest lower interest rates after FairTax passage.[61]

Individuals under the current system who accumulated savings from ordinary income (by choosing not to spend their money when the income was earned) paid taxes on that income before it was placed in savings (such as a Roth IRA or CD). When individuals spend above the poverty level with money saved under the current system, that spending would be subject to the FairTax. People living through the transition may find both their earnings and their spending taxed.[69] Critics have stated that the FairTax would result in unfair double taxation for savers and suggest it does not address the transition effect on some taxpayers who have accumulated significant savings from after-tax dollars, especially retirees who have finished their careers and switched to spending down their life savings.[39][69] Supporters of the plan argue that the current system is no different, since compliance costs and "hidden taxes" embedded in the prices of goods and services cause savings to be "taxed" a second time already when spent.[69] The rebate would supplement accrued savings, covering taxes up to the poverty level. The income taxes on capital gains, estates, social security and pension benefits would be eliminated under FairTax. In addition, the FairTax legislation adjusts Social Security benefits for changes in the price level, so a percentage increase in prices would result in an equal percentage increase to Social Security income.[17] Supporters suggest these changes would offset paying the FairTax under transition conditions.[12]

Other indirect effects edit

The FairTax would be tax free on mortgage interest up to the federal borrowing rate for like-term instruments as determined by the Treasury,[70] but since savings, education, and other investments would be tax free under the plan, the FairTax could decrease the incentive to spend more on homes. An analysis in 2008 by the Baker Institute For Public Policy concluded that the FairTax would have significant transitional issues for the housing sector since the investment would no longer be tax-favored.[52] In a 2007 study, the Beacon Hill Institute concluded that total charitable giving would increase under the FairTax, although increases in giving would not be distributed proportionately among the various types of charitable organizations.[71] The FairTax may also affect state and local government debt as the federal income tax system provides tax advantages to municipal bonds.[72] Proponents believe environmental benefits would result from the FairTax through environmental economics and the re-use and re-sale of used goods. Advocates argue the FairTax would provide an incentive for illegal immigrants to legalize as they would otherwise not receive the rebate.[2][12] Proponents also believe that the FairTax would have positive effects on civil liberties that are sometimes charged against the income tax system, such as social inequality, economic inequality, financial privacy, self-incrimination, unreasonable search and seizure, burden of proof, and due process.[15]

If the FairTax bill were passed, permanent elimination of income taxation would not be guaranteed; the FairTax bill would repeal much of the existing tax code, but the Sixteenth Amendment would remain in place. Preventing new legislation from reintroducing income taxation would require a repeal of the Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution with a separate provision expressly prohibiting a federal income tax.[60] This is referred to as an "aggressive repeal". Separate income taxes enforced by individual states would be unaffected by the federal repeal. Passing the FairTax would require only a simple majority in each house of the United States Congress along with the signature of the President, whereas enactment of a constitutional amendment must be approved by two thirds of each house of the Congress, and three-quarters of the individual U.S. states. It is therefore possible that passage of the FairTax bill would simply add another taxation system. If a new income tax bill were passed after the FairTax passage, a hybrid system could develop; albeit, there is nothing preventing a bill for a hybrid system today. To address this issue and preclude that possibility, in the 111th Congress John Linder introduced a contingent sunset provision in H.R. 25. It would require the repeal of the Sixteenth Amendment within 8 years after the implementation of the FairTax or, failing that, the FairTax would expire.[73] Critics have also argued that a tax on state government consumption could be unconstitutional.[67]

Changes in the retail economy edit

Since the FairTax would not tax used goods, the value would be determined by the supply and demand in relation to new goods.[74] The price differential/margins between used and new goods would stay consistent, as the cost and value of used goods are in direct relationship to the cost and value of the new goods. Because the U.S. tax system has a hidden effect on prices, it is expected that moving to the FairTax would decrease production costs from the removal of business taxes and compliance costs, which is predicted to offset a portion of the FairTax effect on prices.[12]

Value of used goods edit

Since the FairTax would not tax used goods, some critics have argued that this would create a differential between the price of new and used goods, which may take years to equalize.[38] Such a differential would certainly influence the sale of new goods like vehicles and homes. Similarly, some supporters have claimed that this would create an incentive to buy used goods, creating environmental benefits of re-use and re-sale. Conversely, it is argued that like the income tax system that contains embedded tax cost (see Theories of retail pricing),[75] used goods would contain the embedded FairTax cost.[69] While the FairTax would not be applied to the retail sales of used goods, the inherent value of a used good includes the taxes paid when the good was sold at retail. The value is determined by the supply and demand in relation to new goods.[74] The price differential/margins between used and new goods should stay consistent, as the cost and value of used goods are in direct relationship to the cost and value of the new goods.

Theories of retail pricing edit

 
A supply and demand diagram illustrating taxes' effect on prices

Based on a study conducted by Dale Jorgenson, proponents state that production cost of domestic goods and services could decrease by approximately 22% on average after embedded tax costs are removed, leaving the sale nearly the same after taxes. The study concludes that producer prices would drop between 15% and 26% (depending on the type of good/service).[76] Jorgenson's research included all income and payroll taxes in the embedded tax estimation, which assumes employee take-home pay (net income) remains unchanged from pre-FairTax levels.[5][77] Price and wage changes after the FairTax would largely depend on the response of the Federal Reserve monetary authorities.[30][38][78] Non-accommodation of the money supply would suggest retail prices and take home pay stay the same—embedded taxes are replaced by the FairTax. Full accommodation would suggest prices and incomes rise by the exclusive rate (i.e., 30%)—embedded taxes become windfall gains. Partial accommodation would suggest a varying degree in-between.[30][78]

If businesses provided employees with gross pay (including income tax withholding and the employee share of payroll taxes),[45] Arduin, Laffer & Moore Econometrics estimated production costs could decrease by a minimum of 11.55% (partial accommodation).[48] This reduction would be from the removal of the remaining embedded costs, including corporate taxes, compliance costs, and the employer share of payroll taxes. This decrease would offset a portion of the FairTax amount reflected in retail prices, which proponents suggest as the most likely scenario.[30] Bruce Bartlett states that it is unlikely that nominal wages would be reduced, which he believes would result in a recession, but that the Federal Reserve would likely increase the money supply to accommodate price increases.[38] David Tuerck states "The monetary authorities would have to consider how the degree of accommodation, varying from none to full, would affect the overall economy and how it would affect the well-being of various groups such as retirees."[78]

Social Security benefits would be adjusted for any price changes due to FairTax implementation.[17] The Beacon Hill Institute states that it would not matter, apart from transition issues, whether prices fall or rise—the relative tax burden and tax rate remains the same.[45] Decreases in production cost would not fully apply to imported products; so according to proponents, it would provide tax advantages for domestic production and increase U.S. competitiveness in global trade (see Border adjustability). To ease the transition, U.S. retailers will receive a tax credit equal to the FairTax on their inventory to allow for quick cost reduction. Retailers would also receive an administrative fee equal to the greater of $200 or 0.25% of the remitted tax as compensation for compliance costs,[79] which amounts to around $5 billion.

Effects on tax code compliance edit

One avenue for non-compliance is the black market. FairTax supporters state that the black market is largely untaxed under the current tax system. Economists estimate the underground economy in the United States to be between one and three trillion dollars annually.[80][81] By imposing a sales tax, supporters argue that black market activity would be taxed when proceeds from such activity are spent on legal consumption.[82] For example, the sale of illegal narcotics would remain untaxed (instead of being guilty of income tax evasion, drug dealers would be guilty of failing to submit sales tax), but they would face taxation when they used drug proceeds to buy consumer goods such as food, clothing, and cars. By taxing this previously untaxed money, FairTax supporters argue that non-filers would be paying part of their share of what would otherwise be uncollected income and payroll taxes.[12][83]

Other economists and analysts have argued that the underground economy would continue to bear the same tax burden as before.[14][82][83][84] They state that replacing the current tax system with a consumption tax would not change the tax revenue generated from the underground economy—while illicit income is not taxed directly, spending of income from illicit activity results in business income and wages that are taxed.[14][82][83]

Tax compliance and evasion edit

 
"No, No! Not That Way"—political cartoon from 1933 commenting on a general sales tax over an income tax

Proponents state the FairTax would reduce the number of tax filers by about 86% (from 100 million to 14 million) and reduce the filing complexity to a simplified state sales tax form.[53] The Government Accountability Office (GAO), among others, have specifically identified the negative relationship between compliance costs and the number of focal points for collection.[85] Under the FairTax, the federal government would be able to concentrate tax enforcement efforts on a single tax. Retailers would receive an administrative fee equal to the greater of $200 or 0.25% of the remitted tax as compensation for compliance costs.[79] In addition, supporters state that the overwhelming majority of purchases occur in major retail outlets, which are very unlikely to evade the FairTax and risk losing their business licenses.[45] Economic Census figures for 2002 show that 48.5% of merchandise sales are made by just 688 businesses ("Big-Box" retailers). 85.7% of all retail sales are made by 92,334 businesses, which is 3.6% of American companies. In the service sector, approximately 80% of sales are made by 1.2% of U.S. businesses.[30]

The FairTax is a national tax, but can be administered by the states rather than a federal agency,[86] which may have a bearing on compliance as the states' own agencies could monitor and audit businesses within that state. The 0.25% retained by the states amounts to $5 billion the states would have available for enforcement and administration. For example, California should receive over $500 million for enforcement and administration, which is more than the $327 million budget for the state's sales and excise taxes.[87] Because the federal money paid to the states would be a percentage of the total revenue collected, John Linder claims the states would have an incentive to maximize collections.[12] Proponents believe that states that choose to conform to the federal tax base would have advantages in enforcement, information sharing, and clear interstate revenue allocation rules.[85][86] A study by the Beacon Hill Institute concluded that, on average, states could more than halve their sales tax rates and that state economies would benefit greatly from adopting a state-level FairTax.[85]

FairTax opponents state that compliance decreases when taxes are not automatically withheld from citizens, and that massive tax evasion could result by collecting at just one point in the economic system.[38] Compliance rates can also fall when taxed entities, rather than a third party, self-report their tax liability. For example, ordinary personal income taxes can be automatically withheld and are reported to the government by a third party. Taxes without withholding and with self-reporting, such as the FairTax, can see higher evasion rates. Economist Jane Gravelle of the Congressional Research Service found studies showing that evasion rates of sales taxes are often above 10%, even when the sales tax rate is in the single digits.[83] Tax publications by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), IMF, and Brookings Institution have suggested that the upper limit for a sales tax is about 10% before incentives for evasion become too great to control.[38] According to the GAO, 80% of state tax officials opposed a national sales tax as an intrusion on their tax base.[38] Opponents also raise concerns of legal tax avoidance by spending and consuming outside of the U.S. (imported goods would be subject to collection by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection).[88]

Economists from the University of Tennessee concluded that while there would be many desirable macroeconomic effects, adoption of a national retail sales tax would also have serious effects on state and local government finances.[89] Economist Bruce Bartlett stated that if the states did not conform to the FairTax, they would have massive confusion and complication as to what is taxed by the state and what is taxed by the federal government.[38] In addition, sales taxes have long exempted all but a few services because of the enormous difficulty in taxing intangibles—Bartlett suggests that the state may not have sufficient incentive to enforce the tax.[43] University of Michigan economist Joel Slemrod argues that states would face significant issues in enforcing the tax. "Even at an average rate of around five percent, state sales taxes are difficult to administer."[90] University of Virginia School of Law professor George Yin states that the FairTax could have evasion issues with export and import transactions.[39] The President's Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform reported that if the federal government were to cease taxing income, states might choose to shift their revenue-raising to income.[9] Absent the Internal Revenue Service, it would be more difficult for the states to maintain viable income tax systems.[9][89]

Underground economy edit

Opponents of the FairTax argue that imposing a national retail sales tax would drive transactions underground and create a vast underground economy.[5] Under a retail sales tax system, the purchase of intermediate goods and services that are factors of production are not taxed, since those goods would produce a final retail good that would be taxed. Individuals and businesses may be able to manipulate the tax system by claiming that purchases are for intermediate goods, when in fact they are final purchases that should be taxed. Proponents point out that a business is required to have a registered seller's certificate on file, and must keep complete records of all transactions for six years. Businesses must also record all taxable goods bought for seven years. They are required to report these sales every month (see Personal vs. business purchases).[41] The government could also stipulate that all retail sellers provide buyers with a written receipt, regardless of transaction type (cash, credit, etc.), which would create a paper trail for evasion with risk of having the buyer turn them in (the FairTax authorizes a reward for reporting tax cheats).[53]

While many economists and tax experts support a consumption tax, problems could arise with using a retail sales tax rather than a value added tax (VAT).[5][38] A VAT imposes a tax on the value added at every intermediate step of production, so the goods reach the final consumer with much of the tax already in the price.[91] The retail seller has little incentive to conceal retail sales, since he has already paid much of the good's tax. Retailers are unlikely to subsidize the consumer's tax evasion by concealing sales. In contrast, a retailer has paid no tax on goods under a sales tax system. This provides an incentive for retailers to conceal sales and engage in "tax arbitrage" by sharing some of the illicit tax savings with the final consumer. Citing evasion, Tim Worstall wrote in Forbes that Europe's 20-25% consumption taxes simply would not work if they were a sales tax: that's why they're all a VAT.[91] Laurence Kotlikoff has stated that the government could compel firms to report, via 1099-type forms, their sales to other firms, which would provide the same records that arise under a VAT.[53] In the United States, a general sales tax is imposed in 45 states plus the District of Columbia (accounting for over 97% of both population and economic output), which proponents argue provides a large infrastructure for taxing sales that many countries do not have.

Personal versus business purchases edit

Businesses would be required to submit monthly or quarterly reports (depending on sales volume) of taxable sales and sales tax collected on their monthly sales tax return. During audits, the business would have to produce invoices for the "business purchases" that they did not pay sales tax on, and would have to be able to show that they were genuine business expenses.[41] Advocates state the significant 86% reduction in collection points would greatly increase the likelihood of business audits, making tax evasion behavior much more risky.[53] Additionally, the FairTax legislation has several fines and penalties for non-compliance, and authorizes a mechanism for reporting tax cheats to obtain a reward.[41] To prevent businesses from purchasing everything for their employees, in a family business for example, goods and services bought by the business for the employees that are not strictly for business use would be taxable.[41] Health insurance or medical expenses would be an example where the business would have to pay the FairTax on these purchases. Taxable property and services purchased by a qualified non-profit or religious organization "for business purposes" would not be taxable.[92]

FairTax movement edit

 
A FairTax rally in Orlando, Florida on July 28, 2006

The creation of the FairTax began with a group of businessmen from Houston, Texas, who initially financed what has become the political advocacy group Americans For Fair Taxation (AFFT), which has grown into a large tax reform movement.[4][30] This organization, founded in 1994, claims to have spent over $20 million in research, marketing, lobbying, and organizing efforts over a ten-year period and is seeking to raise over $100 million more to promote the plan.[93] AFFT includes a staff in Houston and a large group of volunteers who are working to get the FairTax enacted.

In 2007 Bruce Bartlett said the FairTax was devised by the Church of Scientology in the early 1990s,[43] drawing comparisons between the tax policy and religious doctrine from the faith, whose creation myth holds that an evil alien ruler known as Xenu "used phony tax inspections as a guise for destroying his enemies."[94] Representative John Linder told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that Bartlett confused the FairTax movement with the Scientology-affiliated Citizens for an Alternative Tax System,[95] which also seeks to abolish the federal income tax and replace it with a national retail sales tax. Leo Linbeck, AFFT Chairman and CEO, stated "As a founder of Americans For Fair Taxation, I can state categorically, however, that Scientology played no role in the founding, research or crafting of the legislation giving expression to the FairTax."[93]

Much support has been achieved by talk radio personality Neal Boortz.[96] Boortz's book (co-authored by Georgia Congressman John Linder) entitled The FairTax Book, explains the proposal and spent time atop The New York Times Best Seller list. Boortz stated that he donates his share of the proceeds to charity to promote the book.[96] In addition, Boortz and Linder have organized several FairTax rallies to publicize support for the plan. Other media personalities have also assisted in growing grassroots support including former radio and TV talk show host Larry Elder, radio host and former candidate for the 2012 GOP Presidential Nomination Herman Cain, Fox News and radio host Sean Hannity, and Fox Business Host John Stossel.[97] The FairTax received additional visibility as one of the issues in the 2008 presidential election. At a debate on June 30, 2007, several Republican candidates were asked about their position on the FairTax and many responded that they would sign the bill into law if elected.[31] The most vocal promoters of the FairTax during the 2008 primary elections were Republican candidate Mike Huckabee and Democratic candidate Mike Gravel. The Internet, blogosphere, and electronic mailing lists have contributed to promoting, organizing, and gaining support for the FairTax. In the 2012 Republican presidential primary, and his ensuing Libertarian Party presidential run, former Governor of New Mexico and businessman Gary Johnson actively campaigned for the FairTax.[98] Former CEO of Godfather's Pizza Herman Cain had promoted the FairTax as a final step in a multiple-phase tax reform.[99] Outside of the United States, the Christian Heritage Party of Canada adopted a FairTax proposal as part of their 2011 election platform[100] but has never been close to winning a seat in any election.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ https://fairtax.org/faq FAQ:Is there any provision in the FAIRtax bill to prevent both an income tax and a sales tax?
  2. ^ a b c d e Fair Tax Act, 2009, Chapter 3
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Kotlikoff, 2005
  4. ^ a b Linbeck statement, 2005
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Regnier, 2005
  6. ^ a b Fair Tax Act, 2009, Chapter 1
  7. ^ a b c d e Gale, 1998
  8. ^ a b c Tuerk et al., 2007
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Tax Reform Panel Report, Ch. 9
  10. ^ a b c d e f Kotlikoff and Rapson, 2006
  11. ^ a b c Kotlikoff and Jokisch, 2007
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j The FairTax Book
  13. ^ a b c Open Letter to the President
  14. ^ a b c d Auerbach, 2005
  15. ^ a b Sipos, 2007
  16. ^ a b Gale, 2005
  17. ^ a b c d Fair Tax Act, 2009, Title III
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-02-05. Retrieved 2015-02-04.
  19. ^ a b H.R.25 108th Cosponsors
  20. ^ a b S.1493 108th Cosponsors
  21. ^ a b H.R.25 109th Cosponsors
  22. ^ a b S.25 109th Cosponsors
  23. ^ a b c H.R.25 110th Cosponsors
  24. ^ S.1025 110th Cosponsors
  25. ^ H.R.25 111th Cosponsors
  26. ^ S.296 111th Cosponsors
  27. ^ H.R.25 112th Cosponsors
  28. ^ S.13 112th Cosponsors
  29. ^ Bender, 2005
  30. ^ a b c d e f g Boortz and Linder, 2008
  31. ^ a b Davis, 2007
  32. ^ CBS News, 2007
  33. ^ Rasmussen Reports, 2009
  34. ^ Obama, 2008
  35. ^ 2015 prebate
  36. ^ a b c d e Rebuttal to Tax Panel Report, 2006
  37. ^ Bartlett, 2007
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bartlett, 2007, Tax Notes
  39. ^ a b c d Yin, 2006, Fla. L. Rev.
  40. ^ Linder and Boortz, 2007
  41. ^ a b c d e Fair Tax Act, 2009, Chapter 5
  42. ^ a b Miller, 2007
  43. ^ a b c d Bartlett, 2007, Wall Street Journal
  44. ^ Gingrich and Ferrara, 2005
  45. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Bachman et al., 2006
  46. ^ a b Burton and Mastromarco, 1998
  47. ^ Burton and Mastromarco, 1998a
  48. ^ a b c d Arduin, Laffer & Moore Econometrics, 2006
  49. ^ Altig et al., 2001
  50. ^ a b c Tuerk et al., 2007
  51. ^ Esenwein, 2005
  52. ^ a b c Diamond and Zodrow, 2008
  53. ^ a b c d e f Kotlikoff, 2008
  54. ^ a b Fair Tax Act, 2009
  55. ^ a b c Taranto, 2007
  56. ^ Kotlikoff and Rapson, 2006
  57. ^ Tuerk et al., 2007
  58. ^ Zodrow and McClure, 2006
  59. ^ Giuliani, 2007
  60. ^ a b Vance, 2005
  61. ^ a b Golob, 1995
  62. ^ Tuerk et al., 2007
  63. ^ Gaver, 2006
  64. ^ Linbeck, 2006a
  65. ^ Linbeck, 2007
  66. ^ Vargas, 2005
  67. ^ a b c Buckley, 2008
  68. ^ IRS Labor Force, 2005
  69. ^ a b c d Taranto, 2007a
  70. ^ Fair Tax Act, 2009, Chapter 8
  71. ^ Tuerck et al., 2007
  72. ^ Types of Bonds
  73. ^ Fair Tax Act, 2009, Title IV
  74. ^ a b Landsburg, 1998
  75. ^ Forbes, 2007
  76. ^ Jorgenson, 1998
  77. ^ Boortz, 2005
  78. ^ a b c Tuerck, 2008
  79. ^ a b Fair Tax Act, 2009, Chapter 2
  80. ^ McTague, 2005
  81. ^ Schlosser, 2004
  82. ^ a b c Taranto, 2007
  83. ^ a b c d American Enterprise Institute, 2007
  84. ^ Moffatt, 2006
  85. ^ a b c Tuerck at el, 2007
  86. ^ a b Fair Tax Act, 2009, Chapter 4
  87. ^ California Legislative Analyst's Office
  88. ^ Karvounis, 2007
  89. ^ a b Fox and Murray, 2005
  90. ^ Slemrod, 2005
  91. ^ a b Worstall, 2015
  92. ^ Fair Tax Act, 2009, Chapter 7
  93. ^ a b Linbeck, 2007
  94. ^ Bartlett, Bruce (7 September 2007). . CBS News. Archived from the original on 13 December 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  95. ^ Galloway, 2007
  96. ^ a b Boortz, 2005
  97. ^ Boortz, 2006
  98. ^ Gary Johnson 2012 Campaign Site, 2011
  99. ^ RedState, 2011
  100. ^ Christian Heritage, 2011

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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • H.R.25: "FairTax Act of 2013" 2013-06-15 at the Wayback Machine: Text of House bill H.R.25
  • S.122: Fair Tax Act of 2013 2014-12-18 at the Wayback Machine: Text of Senate bill S.122
  • : Rob Woodall, The current sponsor of the Fair Tax, on his bill

fairtax, confused, with, illinois, fair, fairtex, this, article, unbalanced, towards, certain, viewpoints, please, improve, article, adding, information, neglected, viewpoints, discuss, issue, talk, page, march, 2020, single, rate, proposal, which, been, propo. Not to be confused with Illinois Fair Tax or Fairtex This article may be unbalanced towards certain viewpoints Please improve the article by adding information on neglected viewpoints or discuss the issue on the talk page March 2020 FairTax is a single rate tax proposal which has been proposed as a bill in the United States Congress regularly since 2005 that includes complete dismantling of the Internal Revenue Service 1 The proposal would eliminate all federal income taxes including the alternative minimum tax corporate income taxes and capital gains taxes payroll taxes including Social Security and Medicare taxes gift taxes and estate taxes replacing them with a single consumption tax on retail sales The proposed Fair Tax Act H R 25 S 18 would apply a tax once at the point of purchase on all new goods and services for personal consumption The proposal also specified a monthly welfare payment for low income earners to offset the regressive tax impact This was styled by advocates as an advance rebate or prebate of tax on purchases up to the poverty level 2 3 First introduced into the United States Congress in 1999 a number of congressional committees have heard testimony on the bill however it did not move from committee A campaign in 2005 for the FairTax proposal 4 involved Leo E Linbeck and the Fairtax org Talk radio personality Neal Boortz and Georgia Congressman John Linder published The FairTax Book in 2005 and additional visibility was gained in the 2008 presidential campaign As defined in the proposed legislation the initial sales tax rate is 30 i e a purchase of 100 would incur a sales tax of 30 resulting in a total price to the consumer of 130 Advocates promote this as a 23 tax inclusive rate based on the total amount paid including the tax which is the method currently used to calculate income tax liability 5 In subsequent years the rate could adjust annually based on federal receipts in the previous fiscal year 6 With the rebate taken into consideration the FairTax would be progressive on consumption 3 but would still be regressive on income since consumption as a percentage of income falls at higher income levels 7 8 Opponents argue this would accordingly decrease the tax burden on high income earners and increase it on the lower class earners 5 9 Supporters contend that the plan would effectively tax wealth increase purchasing power 10 11 and decrease tax burdens by broadening the tax base Advocates expect a consumption tax to increase savings and investment ease tax compliance and increase economic growth increase incentives for international business to locate in the US and increase US competitiveness in international trade 12 13 14 The plan would provide transparency for funding the federal government Supporters believe it would increase civil liberties benefit the environment and effectively tax illegal activity and undocumented immigrants 12 15 Critics contend that a consumption tax of this size would be extremely difficult to collect would lead to pervasive tax evasion 5 7 and raise less revenue than the current tax system leading to an increased budget deficit 5 16 The proposed Fairtax might cause removal of tax deduction incentives transition effects on after tax savings incentives on credit use and the loss of tax advantages to state and local bonds It also includes a sunset clause if the 16th Amendment to the US Constitution is not repealed within seven years of its enactment Contents 1 Legislative overview and history 2 Tax rate 2 1 Sales tax rate 2 2 Effective tax rate 2 3 Monthly tax rebate 2 4 Presentation of tax rate 2 5 Revenue neutrality 3 Taxable items and exemptions 4 Distribution of tax burden 5 Predicted effects 5 1 Economic 5 2 Transition 5 3 Other indirect effects 6 Changes in the retail economy 6 1 Value of used goods 6 2 Theories of retail pricing 7 Effects on tax code compliance 7 1 Tax compliance and evasion 7 2 Underground economy 7 3 Personal versus business purchases 8 FairTax movement 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksLegislative overview and history edit nbsp Rep John Linder holding the 133 page Fair Tax Act of 2007 in contrast to the then current U S tax code and IRS regulations The legislation would remove the Internal Revenue Service after three years and establish Excise Tax and Sales Tax bureaus in the Department of the Treasury 17 The states are granted the primary authority for the collection of sales tax revenues and the remittance of such revenues to the Treasury The plan was created by Americans For Fair Taxation an advocacy group formed to change the tax system The group states that together with economists it developed the plan and the name Fair Tax based on interviews polls and focus groups of the general public 5 The FairTax legislation has been introduced in the House by Georgia Republicans John Linder 1999 2010 and Rob Woodall 2011 2014 18 while being introduced in the Senate by Georgia Republican Saxby Chambliss 2003 2014 Linder first introduced the Fair Tax Act H R 2525 on July 14 1999 to the 106th United States Congress and a substantially similar bill has been reintroduced in each subsequent session of Congress The bill attracted a total of 56 House and Senate cosponsors in the 108th Congress 19 20 61 in the 109th 21 22 76 in the 110th 23 24 70 in the 111th 25 26 78 in the 112th 27 28 83 in the 113th H R 25 S 122 81 in the 114th H R 25 S 155 51 in the 115th H R 25 S 18 33 in the 116th H R 25 and 30 in the 117th H R 25 Former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert Republican had cosponsored the bill in the 109th 110th Congress but it has not received support from the Democratic leadership 22 23 29 Democratic Representative Collin Peterson of Minnesota and Democratic Senator Zell Miller of Georgia cosponsored and introduced the bill in the 108th Congress but Peterson has left the House of Representatives and Miller has left the Senate 19 20 In the 109th 111th Congress Representative Dan Boren was the only Democrat to cosponsor the bill 21 23 A number of congressional committees have heard testimony on the FairTax but it has not moved from committee since its introduction in 1999 The legislation was also discussed with President George W Bush and his Secretary of the Treasury Henry M Paulson 30 To become law the bill will need to be included in a final version of tax legislation from the U S House Committee on Ways and Means pass both the House and the Senate and finally be signed by the President In 2005 President Bush established an advisory panel on tax reform that examined several national sales tax variants including aspects of the FairTax and noted several concerns These included uncertainties as to the revenue that would be generated and difficulties of enforcement and administration which made this type of tax undesirable to recommend in their final report 9 The panel did not examine the FairTax as proposed in the legislation The FairTax received visibility in the 2008 presidential election on the issue of taxes and the IRS with several candidates supporting the bill 31 32 A poll in 2009 by Rasmussen Reports found that 43 of Americans would support a national sales tax replacement with 38 opposed to the idea the sales tax was viewed as fairer by 52 of Republicans 44 of Democrats and 49 of unaffiliateds 33 President Barack Obama did not support the bill 34 arguing for more progressive changes to the income and payroll tax systems President Donald Trump proposed to lower overall income taxation and reduce the number of tax brackets from seven to three Tax rate editThe sales tax rate as defined in the legislation for the first year is 23 of the total payment including the tax 23 of every 100 spent in total calculated similar to income taxes This would be equivalent to a 30 traditional U S sales tax 23 on top of every 77 spent 100 total or 30 on top of every 100 spent 130 total 5 After the first year of implementation this rate is automatically adjusted annually using a predefined formula reflecting actual federal receipts in the previous fiscal year The effective tax rate for any household would be variable due to the fixed monthly tax rebate that are used to rebate taxes paid on purchases up to the poverty level 3 The tax would be levied on all U S retail sales for personal consumption on new goods and services Critics argue that the sales tax rate defined in the legislation would not be revenue neutral that is it would collect less for the government than the current tax system and thus would increase the budget deficit unless government spending were equally reduced 5 Sales tax rate edit During the first year of implementation the FairTax legislation would apply a 23 federal retail sales tax on the total transaction value of a purchase in other words consumers pay to the government 23 cents of every dollar spent in total sometimes called tax inclusive and presented this way to provide a direct comparison with individual income and employment taxes which reduce a person s available money before they can make purchases The equivalent assessed tax rate is 30 if the FairTax is applied to the pre tax price of a good like traditional U S state sales taxes sometimes called tax exclusive this rate is not directly comparable with existing income and employment taxes 5 After the first year of implementation this tax rate would be automatically adjusted annually using a formula specified in the legislation that reflects actual federal receipts in the previous fiscal year 6 Effective tax rate edit Further information Distribution of the FairTax burden A household s effective tax rate on consumption would vary with the annual expenditures on taxable items and the fixed monthly tax rebate The rebate would have the greatest effect at low spending levels where they could lower a household s effective rate to zero or below 10 The lowest effective tax rate under the FairTax could be negative due to the rebate for households with annual spending amounts below poverty level spending for a specified household size At higher spending levels the rebate has less impact and a household s effective tax rate would approach 23 of total spending 10 A person spending at the poverty level would have an effective tax rate of 0 whereas someone spending at four times the poverty level would have an effective tax rate of 17 2 Buying or otherwise receiving items and services not subject to federal taxation such as a used home or car can contribute towards a lower effective tax rate The total amount of spending and the proportion of spending allocated to taxable items would determine a household s effective tax rate on consumption If a rate is calculated on income instead of the tax base the percentage could exceed the statutory tax rate in a given year Monthly tax rebate edit Proposed 2015 FairTax Prebate Schedule 35 One adult household Two adult household Family Size Annual Consumption Allowance Annual Prebate Monthly Prebate Family Size Annual Consumption Allowance Annual Prebate Monthly Prebate 1 person 11 770 2 707 226 couple 23 540 5 414 451 and 1 child 15 930 3 664 305 and 1 child 27 700 6 371 531 and 2 children 20 090 4 621 385 and 2 children 31 860 7 328 611 and 3 children 24 250 5 578 465 and 3 children 36 020 8 285 690 and 4 children 28 410 6 534 545 and 4 children 40 180 9 241 770 and 5 children 32 570 7 491 624 and 5 children 44 340 10 198 850 and 6 children 36 490 8 393 699 and 6 children 48 500 11 155 930 and 7 children 40 890 9 405 784 and 7 children 52 660 12 112 1 009 The annual consumption allowance is based on the 2015 DHHS Poverty Guidelines as published in the Federal Register January 22 2015 There is no marriage penalty as the couple amount is twice the amount that a single adult receives For families households with more than 8 persons add 4 160 to the annual consumption allowance for each additional person The annual consumption allowance is the amount of spending that is untaxed under the FairTax Under the FairTax family households of lawful U S residents would be eligible to receive a Family Consumption Allowance FCA based on family size regardless of income that is equal to the estimated total FairTax paid on poverty level spending according to the poverty guidelines published by the U S Department of Health and Human Services 2 The FCA is a tax rebate known as a prebate as it would be an advance paid in twelve monthly installments adjusted for inflation The rebate is meant to eliminate the taxation of household necessities and make the plan progressive 5 Households would register once a year with their sales tax administering authority providing the names and social security numbers of each household member 2 The Social Security Administration would disburse the monthly rebate payments in the form of a paper check via U S Mail an electronic funds transfer to a bank account or a smartcard that can be used like a debit card 2 Opponents of the plan criticize this tax rebate due to its costs Economists at the Beacon Hill Institute estimated the overall rebate cost to be 489 billion assuming 100 participation 36 In addition economist Bruce Bartlett has argued that the rebate would create a large opportunity for fraud 37 treats children disparately and would constitute a welfare payment regardless of need 38 The President s Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform cited the rebate as one of their chief concerns when analyzing their national sales tax stating that it would be the largest entitlement program in American history and contending that it would make most American families dependent on monthly checks from the federal government 9 39 Estimated by the advisory panel at approximately 600 billion the Prebate program would cost more than all budgeted spending in 2006 on the Departments of Agriculture Commerce Defense Education Energy Homeland Security Housing and Urban Development and Interior combined 9 Proponents point out that income tax deductions tax preferences loopholes credits etc under the current system was estimated at 945 billion by the Joint Committee on Taxation 36 They argue this is 456 billion more than the FairTax entitlement tax refund would spend to cover each person s tax expenses up to the poverty level In addition it was estimated for 2005 that the Internal Revenue Service was already sending out 270 billion in refund checks 36 Presentation of tax rate edit nbsp Mathematically a 23 tax out of 100 yields approximately the same as a 30 tax on 77 Sales and income taxes behave differently due to differing definitions of tax base which can make comparisons between the two confusing Under the existing individual income plus employment Social Security Medicare Medicaid tax formula taxes to be paid are included in the base on which the tax rate is imposed known as tax inclusive If an individual s gross income is 100 and the sum of their income plus employment tax rate is 23 taxes owed equals 23 Traditional state sales taxes are imposed on a tax base equal to the pre tax portion of a good s price known as tax exclusive A good priced at 77 with a 30 sales tax rate yields 23 in taxes owed To adjust an inclusive rate to an exclusive rate divide the given rate by one minus that rate i e 0 23 1 0 23 0 23 0 77 0 30 displaystyle 0 23 1 0 23 0 23 0 77 0 30 nbsp The FairTax statutory rate unlike most U S state level sales taxes is presented on a tax base that includes the amount of FairTax paid For example a final after tax price of 100 includes 23 of taxes Although no such requirement is included in the text of the legislation Congressman John Linder has stated that the FairTax would be implemented as an inclusive tax which would include the tax in the retail price not added on at checkout an item on the shelf for five dollars would be five dollars total 30 40 The legislation requires the receipt to display the tax as 23 of the total 41 Linder states the FairTax is presented as a 23 tax rate for easy comparison to income and employment tax rates the taxes it would be replacing The plan s opponents call the semantics deceptive FactCheck called the presentation misleading saying that it hides the real truth of the tax rate 42 Bruce Bartlett stated that polls show tax reform support is extremely sensitive to the proposed rate 38 and called the presentation confusing and deceptive based on the conventional method of calculating sales taxes 43 Proponents believe it is both inaccurate and misleading to say that an income tax is 23 and the FairTax is 30 as it implies that the sales tax burden is higher Revenue neutrality edit Main article Revenue neutrality of the FairTax A key question surrounding the FairTax is whether the tax has the ability to be revenue neutral that is whether the tax would result in an increase or reduction in overall federal tax revenues Economists advisory groups and political advocacy groups disagree about the tax rate required for the FairTax to be truly revenue neutral Various analysts use different assumptions time frames and methods resulting in dramatically different tax rates making direct comparison among the studies difficult The choice between static or dynamic scoring further complicates any estimate of revenue neutral rates 44 A 2006 study published in Tax Notes by the Beacon Hill Institute at Suffolk University and Dr Laurence Kotlikoff estimated the FairTax would be revenue neutral for the tax year 2007 at a rate of 23 82 31 27 tax exclusive 45 The study states that purchasing power is transferred to state and local taxpayers from state and local governments To recapture the lost revenue state and local governments would have to raise tax rates or otherwise change tax laws in order to continue collecting the same real revenues from their taxpayers 39 45 The Argus Group and Arduin Laffer amp Moore Econometrics each published an analysis that defended the 23 rate 46 47 48 While proponents of the FairTax concede that the above studies did not explicitly account for tax evasion they also claim that the studies did not altogether ignore tax evasion under the FairTax These studies presumably incorporated some degree of tax evasion in their calculations by using National Income and Product Account based figures which is argued to understate total household consumption 45 The studies also did not account for capital gains that may be realized by the U S government if consumer prices were allowed to rise which would reduce the real value of nominal U S government debt 45 Nor did these studies account for any increased economic growth that many economists researching the plan believe would occur 45 48 49 50 In contrast to the above studies William G Gale of the Brookings Institution published a study in Tax Notes that estimated a rate of 28 2 39 3 tax exclusive for 2007 assuming full taxpayer compliance and an average rate of 31 44 tax exclusive from 2006 to 2015 assumes that the Bush tax cuts expire on schedule and accounts for the replacement of an additional 3 trillion collected through the Alternative Minimum Tax 5 16 51 The study also concluded that if the tax base were eroded by 10 due to tax evasion tax avoidance and or legislative adjustments the average rate would be 34 53 tax exclusive for the 10 year period A dynamic analysis in 2008 by the Baker Institute For Public Policy concluded that a 28 38 9 tax exclusive rate would be revenue neutral for 2006 52 The President s Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform performed a 2006 analysis to replace the individual and corporate income tax with a retail sales tax and estimated the rate to be 25 34 tax exclusive assuming 15 tax evasion and 33 49 tax exclusive with 30 tax evasion 9 The rate would need to be substantially higher to replace the additional taxes replaced by the FairTax payroll estate and gift taxes Beacon Hill Institute FairTax org and Kotlikoff criticized the President s Advisory Panel s study as having allegedly altered the terms of the FairTax using unsound methodology and or failing to fully explain their calculations 36 45 53 Taxable items and exemptions editThe tax would be levied once at the final retail sale for personal consumption on new goods and services Purchases of used items exports and all business transactions would not be taxed Also excluded are investments such as purchases of stock corporate mergers and acquisitions and capital investments Savings and education tuition expenses would be exempt as they would be considered an investment rather than final consumption 54 A good would be considered used and not taxable if a consumer already owns it before the FairTax takes effect or if the FairTax has been paid previously on the good which may be different from the item being sold previously Personal services such as health care legal services financial services and auto repairs would be subject to the FairTax as would renting apartments and other real property 5 Food clothing prescription drugs and medical services would be taxed State sales taxes generally exempt these types of basic need items in an effort to reduce the tax burden on low income families The FairTax would use a monthly rebate system instead of the common state exclusions Internet purchases would be taxed as would retail international purchases such as a boat or car that are imported to the United States collected by the U S Customs and Border Protection 54 Distribution of tax burden editMain article Distribution of the FairTax burden nbsp Working paper by Kotlikoff and Rapson 10 of the FairTax Lower rates claimed on workers from a larger tax base replacing regressive taxes and wealth taxation nbsp President s Advisory Panel s analysis of a hybrid National Sales Tax Higher rates claimed on the middle class for an income tax replacement excludes payroll estate and gift taxes replaced under the FairTax The FairTax s effect on the distribution of taxation or tax incidence the effect on the distribution of economic welfare is a point of dispute The plan s supporters argue that the tax would broaden the tax base that it would be progressive and that it would decrease tax burdens and start taxing wealth reducing the economic gap 10 Opponents argue that a national sales tax would be inherently regressive and would decrease tax burdens paid by high income individuals 5 55 A person earning 2 million a year could live well spending 1 million and as a result pay a mere 11 of that year s income in taxes 5 Households at the lower end of the income scale spend almost all their income while households at the higher end are more likely to devote a portion of income to saving Therefore according to economist William G Gale the percentage of income taxed is regressive at higher income levels as consumption falls as a percentage of income 7 Income earned and saved would not be taxed until spent under the proposal Households at the extreme high end of consumption often finance their purchases out of savings not income 7 38 Economist Laurence Kotlikoff states that the FairTax could make the tax system much more progressive and generationally equitable 3 and argues that taxing consumption is effectively the same as taxing wages plus taxing wealth 3 A household of three persons this example will use two adults plus one child the rebate does not consider marital status spending 30 000 a year on taxable items would devote about 3 4 of total spending 6 900 tax minus 5 888 rebate 30 000 spending to the FairTax after the rebate The same household spending 125 000 on taxable items would spend around 18 3 28 750 tax minus 5 888 rebate 125 000 spending on the FairTax At higher spending levels the rebate has less impact and the rate approaches 23 of total spending Thus according to economist Laurence Kotlikoff the effective tax rate is progressive on consumption 3 An unreviewed paper by Kotlikoff and David Rapson states that the FairTax would significantly reduce marginal taxes on work and saving lowering overall average remaining lifetime tax burdens on current and future workers 10 56 A study by Kotlikoff and Sabine Jokisch concluded that the long term effects of the FairTax would reward low income households with 26 3 more purchasing power middle income households with 12 4 more purchasing power and high income households with 5 more purchasing power 11 The Beacon Hill Institute reported that the FairTax would make the federal tax system more progressive and would benefit the average individual in almost all expenditures deciles 8 In another study they state the FairTax would offer the broadest tax base an increase of over 2 trillion which allows the FairTax to have a lower tax rate than current tax law 57 Gale analyzed a national sales tax though different from the FairTax in several aspects 8 46 and reported that the overall tax burden on middle income Americans would increase while the tax burden on the top 1 would drop 7 A study by the Beacon Hill Institute reported that the FairTax may have a negative effect on the well being of mid income earners for several years after implementation 50 According to the President s Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform report which compared the individual and corporate income tax excluding other taxes the FairTax replaces to a sales tax with rebate 9 36 the percentage of federal taxes paid by those earning from 15 000 50 000 would rise from 3 6 to 6 7 while the burden on those earning more than 200 000 would fall from 53 5 to 45 9 9 The report states that the top 5 of earners would see their burden decrease from 58 6 to 37 4 9 58 FairTax supporters argue that replacing the regressive payroll tax a 15 3 total tax not included in the Tax Panel study 9 payroll taxes include a 12 4 Social Security tax on wages up to 97 500 and a 2 9 Medicare tax a 15 3 total tax that is often split between employee and employer greatly changes the tax distribution and that the FairTax would relieve the tax burden on middle class workers 3 53 Predicted effects editMain article Predicted effects of the FairTax The predicted effects of the FairTax are a source of disagreement among economists and other analysts 42 43 55 According to Money magazine while many economists and tax experts support the idea of a consumption tax many of them view the FairTax proposal as having serious problems with evasion and revenue neutrality 5 Some economists argue that a consumption tax the FairTax is one such tax would have a positive effect on economic growth incentives for international business to locate in the U S and increased U S international competitiveness border tax adjustment in global trade 12 13 14 The FairTax would be tax free on mortgage interest up to a basic interest rate and donations but some lawmakers have concerns about losing tax incentives on home ownership and charitable contributions 59 There is also concern about the effect on the income tax industry and the difficulty of repealing the Sixteenth Amendment to prevent Congress from re introducing an income tax 60 Economic edit Further information Predicted effects of the FairTax Economic effects Americans For Fair Taxation states the FairTax would boost the United States economy and offers a letter signed by eighty economists including Nobel Laureate Vernon L Smith that have endorsed the plan 13 The Beacon Hill Institute estimated that within five years real GDP would increase 10 7 over the current system domestic investment by 86 3 capital stock by 9 3 employment by 9 9 real wages by 10 2 and consumption by 1 8 50 Arduin Laffer amp Moore Econometrics projected the economy as measured by GDP would be 2 4 higher in the first year and 11 3 higher by the 10th year than it would otherwise be 48 Economists Laurence Kotlikoff and Sabine Jokisch reported the incentive to work and save would increase by 2030 the economy s capital stock would increase by 43 7 over the current system output by 9 4 and real wages by 11 5 11 Economist John Golob estimates a consumption tax like the FairTax would bring long term interest rates down by 25 35 61 An analysis in 2008 by the Baker Institute For Public Policy indicated that the plan would generate significant overall macroeconomic improvement in both the short and long term but warned of transitional issues 52 FairTax proponents argue that the proposal would provide tax burden visibility and reduce compliance and efficiency costs by 90 returning a large share of money to the productive economy 3 The Beacon Hill Institute concluded that the FairTax would save 346 51 billion in administrative costs and would be a much more efficient taxation system 62 Bill Archer former head of the House Ways and Means Committee asked Princeton University Econometrics to survey 500 European and Asian companies regarding the effect on their business decisions if the United States enacted the FairTax 400 of those companies stated they would build their next plant in the United States and 100 companies said they would move their corporate headquarters to the United States 63 Supporters argue that the U S has the highest combined statutory corporate income tax rate among OECD countries along with being the only country with no border adjustment element in its tax system 64 Proponents state that because the FairTax eliminates corporate income taxes and is automatically border adjustable the competitive tax advantage of foreign producers would be eliminated immediately boosting U S competitiveness overseas and at home 65 Opponents point to a study commissioned by the National Retail Federation in 2000 that found a national sales tax bill filed by Billy Tauzin the Individual Tax Freedom Act H R 2717 would bring a three year decline in the economy a four year decline in employment and an eight year decline in consumer spending 66 The Wall Street Journal columnist James Taranto states the FairTax is unsuited to take advantage of supply side effects and would create a powerful disincentive to spend money 55 John Linder states an estimated 11 trillion is held in foreign accounts largely for tax purposes which he states would be repatriated back to U S banks if the FairTax were enacted becoming available to U S capital markets bringing down interest rates and otherwise promoting economic growth in the United States 12 Attorney Allen Buckley states that a tremendous amount of wealth was already repatriated under law changes in 2004 and 2005 67 Buckley also argues that if the tax rate was significantly higher the FairTax would discourage the consumption of new goods and hurt economic growth 67 Transition edit Further information Predicted effects of the FairTax Transition effects nbsp Stability of the tax base a comparison of personal consumption expenditures and adjusted gross income During the transition many or most of the employees of the IRS 105 978 in 2005 68 would face loss of employment 45 The Beacon Hill Institute estimate is that the federal government would be able to cut 8 billion from the IRS budget of 11 01 billion in 2007 reducing the size of federal tax administration by 73 45 In addition income tax preparers many seasonal tax lawyers tax compliance staff in medium to large businesses and software companies which sell tax preparation software could face significant drops changes or loss of employment The bill would maintain the IRS for three years after implementation before completely decommissioning the agency providing employees time to find other employment 17 In the period before the FairTax is implemented there could be a strong incentive for individuals to buy goods without the sales tax using credit After the FairTax is in effect the credit could be paid off using untaxed payroll If credit incentives do not change opponents of the FairTax worry it could exacerbate an existing consumer debt problem Proponents of the FairTax state that this effect could also allow individuals to pay off their existing pre FairTax debt more quickly 12 and studies suggest lower interest rates after FairTax passage 61 Individuals under the current system who accumulated savings from ordinary income by choosing not to spend their money when the income was earned paid taxes on that income before it was placed in savings such as a Roth IRA or CD When individuals spend above the poverty level with money saved under the current system that spending would be subject to the FairTax People living through the transition may find both their earnings and their spending taxed 69 Critics have stated that the FairTax would result in unfair double taxation for savers and suggest it does not address the transition effect on some taxpayers who have accumulated significant savings from after tax dollars especially retirees who have finished their careers and switched to spending down their life savings 39 69 Supporters of the plan argue that the current system is no different since compliance costs and hidden taxes embedded in the prices of goods and services cause savings to be taxed a second time already when spent 69 The rebate would supplement accrued savings covering taxes up to the poverty level The income taxes on capital gains estates social security and pension benefits would be eliminated under FairTax In addition the FairTax legislation adjusts Social Security benefits for changes in the price level so a percentage increase in prices would result in an equal percentage increase to Social Security income 17 Supporters suggest these changes would offset paying the FairTax under transition conditions 12 Other indirect effects edit Further information Predicted effects of the FairTax Other indirect effects The FairTax would be tax free on mortgage interest up to the federal borrowing rate for like term instruments as determined by the Treasury 70 but since savings education and other investments would be tax free under the plan the FairTax could decrease the incentive to spend more on homes An analysis in 2008 by the Baker Institute For Public Policy concluded that the FairTax would have significant transitional issues for the housing sector since the investment would no longer be tax favored 52 In a 2007 study the Beacon Hill Institute concluded that total charitable giving would increase under the FairTax although increases in giving would not be distributed proportionately among the various types of charitable organizations 71 The FairTax may also affect state and local government debt as the federal income tax system provides tax advantages to municipal bonds 72 Proponents believe environmental benefits would result from the FairTax through environmental economics and the re use and re sale of used goods Advocates argue the FairTax would provide an incentive for illegal immigrants to legalize as they would otherwise not receive the rebate 2 12 Proponents also believe that the FairTax would have positive effects on civil liberties that are sometimes charged against the income tax system such as social inequality economic inequality financial privacy self incrimination unreasonable search and seizure burden of proof and due process 15 If the FairTax bill were passed permanent elimination of income taxation would not be guaranteed the FairTax bill would repeal much of the existing tax code but the Sixteenth Amendment would remain in place Preventing new legislation from reintroducing income taxation would require a repeal of the Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution with a separate provision expressly prohibiting a federal income tax 60 This is referred to as an aggressive repeal Separate income taxes enforced by individual states would be unaffected by the federal repeal Passing the FairTax would require only a simple majority in each house of the United States Congress along with the signature of the President whereas enactment of a constitutional amendment must be approved by two thirds of each house of the Congress and three quarters of the individual U S states It is therefore possible that passage of the FairTax bill would simply add another taxation system If a new income tax bill were passed after the FairTax passage a hybrid system could develop albeit there is nothing preventing a bill for a hybrid system today To address this issue and preclude that possibility in the 111th Congress John Linder introduced a contingent sunset provision in H R 25 It would require the repeal of the Sixteenth Amendment within 8 years after the implementation of the FairTax or failing that the FairTax would expire 73 Critics have also argued that a tax on state government consumption could be unconstitutional 67 Changes in the retail economy editSee also Tax Economics of taxation and Effect of taxes and subsidies on price Since the FairTax would not tax used goods the value would be determined by the supply and demand in relation to new goods 74 The price differential margins between used and new goods would stay consistent as the cost and value of used goods are in direct relationship to the cost and value of the new goods Because the U S tax system has a hidden effect on prices it is expected that moving to the FairTax would decrease production costs from the removal of business taxes and compliance costs which is predicted to offset a portion of the FairTax effect on prices 12 Value of used goods edit Since the FairTax would not tax used goods some critics have argued that this would create a differential between the price of new and used goods which may take years to equalize 38 Such a differential would certainly influence the sale of new goods like vehicles and homes Similarly some supporters have claimed that this would create an incentive to buy used goods creating environmental benefits of re use and re sale Conversely it is argued that like the income tax system that contains embedded tax cost see Theories of retail pricing 75 used goods would contain the embedded FairTax cost 69 While the FairTax would not be applied to the retail sales of used goods the inherent value of a used good includes the taxes paid when the good was sold at retail The value is determined by the supply and demand in relation to new goods 74 The price differential margins between used and new goods should stay consistent as the cost and value of used goods are in direct relationship to the cost and value of the new goods Theories of retail pricing edit nbsp A supply and demand diagram illustrating taxes effect on prices Based on a study conducted by Dale Jorgenson proponents state that production cost of domestic goods and services could decrease by approximately 22 on average after embedded tax costs are removed leaving the sale nearly the same after taxes The study concludes that producer prices would drop between 15 and 26 depending on the type of good service 76 Jorgenson s research included all income and payroll taxes in the embedded tax estimation which assumes employee take home pay net income remains unchanged from pre FairTax levels 5 77 Price and wage changes after the FairTax would largely depend on the response of the Federal Reserve monetary authorities 30 38 78 Non accommodation of the money supply would suggest retail prices and take home pay stay the same embedded taxes are replaced by the FairTax Full accommodation would suggest prices and incomes rise by the exclusive rate i e 30 embedded taxes become windfall gains Partial accommodation would suggest a varying degree in between 30 78 If businesses provided employees with gross pay including income tax withholding and the employee share of payroll taxes 45 Arduin Laffer amp Moore Econometrics estimated production costs could decrease by a minimum of 11 55 partial accommodation 48 This reduction would be from the removal of the remaining embedded costs including corporate taxes compliance costs and the employer share of payroll taxes This decrease would offset a portion of the FairTax amount reflected in retail prices which proponents suggest as the most likely scenario 30 Bruce Bartlett states that it is unlikely that nominal wages would be reduced which he believes would result in a recession but that the Federal Reserve would likely increase the money supply to accommodate price increases 38 David Tuerck states The monetary authorities would have to consider how the degree of accommodation varying from none to full would affect the overall economy and how it would affect the well being of various groups such as retirees 78 Social Security benefits would be adjusted for any price changes due to FairTax implementation 17 The Beacon Hill Institute states that it would not matter apart from transition issues whether prices fall or rise the relative tax burden and tax rate remains the same 45 Decreases in production cost would not fully apply to imported products so according to proponents it would provide tax advantages for domestic production and increase U S competitiveness in global trade see Border adjustability To ease the transition U S retailers will receive a tax credit equal to the FairTax on their inventory to allow for quick cost reduction Retailers would also receive an administrative fee equal to the greater of 200 or 0 25 of the remitted tax as compensation for compliance costs 79 which amounts to around 5 billion Effects on tax code compliance editOne avenue for non compliance is the black market FairTax supporters state that the black market is largely untaxed under the current tax system Economists estimate the underground economy in the United States to be between one and three trillion dollars annually 80 81 By imposing a sales tax supporters argue that black market activity would be taxed when proceeds from such activity are spent on legal consumption 82 For example the sale of illegal narcotics would remain untaxed instead of being guilty of income tax evasion drug dealers would be guilty of failing to submit sales tax but they would face taxation when they used drug proceeds to buy consumer goods such as food clothing and cars By taxing this previously untaxed money FairTax supporters argue that non filers would be paying part of their share of what would otherwise be uncollected income and payroll taxes 12 83 Other economists and analysts have argued that the underground economy would continue to bear the same tax burden as before 14 82 83 84 They state that replacing the current tax system with a consumption tax would not change the tax revenue generated from the underground economy while illicit income is not taxed directly spending of income from illicit activity results in business income and wages that are taxed 14 82 83 Tax compliance and evasion edit nbsp No No Not That Way political cartoon from 1933 commenting on a general sales tax over an income tax Proponents state the FairTax would reduce the number of tax filers by about 86 from 100 million to 14 million and reduce the filing complexity to a simplified state sales tax form 53 The Government Accountability Office GAO among others have specifically identified the negative relationship between compliance costs and the number of focal points for collection 85 Under the FairTax the federal government would be able to concentrate tax enforcement efforts on a single tax Retailers would receive an administrative fee equal to the greater of 200 or 0 25 of the remitted tax as compensation for compliance costs 79 In addition supporters state that the overwhelming majority of purchases occur in major retail outlets which are very unlikely to evade the FairTax and risk losing their business licenses 45 Economic Census figures for 2002 show that 48 5 of merchandise sales are made by just 688 businesses Big Box retailers 85 7 of all retail sales are made by 92 334 businesses which is 3 6 of American companies In the service sector approximately 80 of sales are made by 1 2 of U S businesses 30 The FairTax is a national tax but can be administered by the states rather than a federal agency 86 which may have a bearing on compliance as the states own agencies could monitor and audit businesses within that state The 0 25 retained by the states amounts to 5 billion the states would have available for enforcement and administration For example California should receive over 500 million for enforcement and administration which is more than the 327 million budget for the state s sales and excise taxes 87 Because the federal money paid to the states would be a percentage of the total revenue collected John Linder claims the states would have an incentive to maximize collections 12 Proponents believe that states that choose to conform to the federal tax base would have advantages in enforcement information sharing and clear interstate revenue allocation rules 85 86 A study by the Beacon Hill Institute concluded that on average states could more than halve their sales tax rates and that state economies would benefit greatly from adopting a state level FairTax 85 FairTax opponents state that compliance decreases when taxes are not automatically withheld from citizens and that massive tax evasion could result by collecting at just one point in the economic system 38 Compliance rates can also fall when taxed entities rather than a third party self report their tax liability For example ordinary personal income taxes can be automatically withheld and are reported to the government by a third party Taxes without withholding and with self reporting such as the FairTax can see higher evasion rates Economist Jane Gravelle of the Congressional Research Service found studies showing that evasion rates of sales taxes are often above 10 even when the sales tax rate is in the single digits 83 Tax publications by the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD IMF and Brookings Institution have suggested that the upper limit for a sales tax is about 10 before incentives for evasion become too great to control 38 According to the GAO 80 of state tax officials opposed a national sales tax as an intrusion on their tax base 38 Opponents also raise concerns of legal tax avoidance by spending and consuming outside of the U S imported goods would be subject to collection by the U S Customs and Border Protection 88 Economists from the University of Tennessee concluded that while there would be many desirable macroeconomic effects adoption of a national retail sales tax would also have serious effects on state and local government finances 89 Economist Bruce Bartlett stated that if the states did not conform to the FairTax they would have massive confusion and complication as to what is taxed by the state and what is taxed by the federal government 38 In addition sales taxes have long exempted all but a few services because of the enormous difficulty in taxing intangibles Bartlett suggests that the state may not have sufficient incentive to enforce the tax 43 University of Michigan economist Joel Slemrod argues that states would face significant issues in enforcing the tax Even at an average rate of around five percent state sales taxes are difficult to administer 90 University of Virginia School of Law professor George Yin states that the FairTax could have evasion issues with export and import transactions 39 The President s Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform reported that if the federal government were to cease taxing income states might choose to shift their revenue raising to income 9 Absent the Internal Revenue Service it would be more difficult for the states to maintain viable income tax systems 9 89 Underground economy edit Opponents of the FairTax argue that imposing a national retail sales tax would drive transactions underground and create a vast underground economy 5 Under a retail sales tax system the purchase of intermediate goods and services that are factors of production are not taxed since those goods would produce a final retail good that would be taxed Individuals and businesses may be able to manipulate the tax system by claiming that purchases are for intermediate goods when in fact they are final purchases that should be taxed Proponents point out that a business is required to have a registered seller s certificate on file and must keep complete records of all transactions for six years Businesses must also record all taxable goods bought for seven years They are required to report these sales every month see Personal vs business purchases 41 The government could also stipulate that all retail sellers provide buyers with a written receipt regardless of transaction type cash credit etc which would create a paper trail for evasion with risk of having the buyer turn them in the FairTax authorizes a reward for reporting tax cheats 53 While many economists and tax experts support a consumption tax problems could arise with using a retail sales tax rather than a value added tax VAT 5 38 A VAT imposes a tax on the value added at every intermediate step of production so the goods reach the final consumer with much of the tax already in the price 91 The retail seller has little incentive to conceal retail sales since he has already paid much of the good s tax Retailers are unlikely to subsidize the consumer s tax evasion by concealing sales In contrast a retailer has paid no tax on goods under a sales tax system This provides an incentive for retailers to conceal sales and engage in tax arbitrage by sharing some of the illicit tax savings with the final consumer Citing evasion Tim Worstall wrote in Forbes that Europe s 20 25 consumption taxes simply would not work if they were a sales tax that s why they re all a VAT 91 Laurence Kotlikoff has stated that the government could compel firms to report via 1099 type forms their sales to other firms which would provide the same records that arise under a VAT 53 In the United States a general sales tax is imposed in 45 states plus the District of Columbia accounting for over 97 of both population and economic output which proponents argue provides a large infrastructure for taxing sales that many countries do not have Personal versus business purchases edit Businesses would be required to submit monthly or quarterly reports depending on sales volume of taxable sales and sales tax collected on their monthly sales tax return During audits the business would have to produce invoices for the business purchases that they did not pay sales tax on and would have to be able to show that they were genuine business expenses 41 Advocates state the significant 86 reduction in collection points would greatly increase the likelihood of business audits making tax evasion behavior much more risky 53 Additionally the FairTax legislation has several fines and penalties for non compliance and authorizes a mechanism for reporting tax cheats to obtain a reward 41 To prevent businesses from purchasing everything for their employees in a family business for example goods and services bought by the business for the employees that are not strictly for business use would be taxable 41 Health insurance or medical expenses would be an example where the business would have to pay the FairTax on these purchases Taxable property and services purchased by a qualified non profit or religious organization for business purposes would not be taxable 92 FairTax movement edit nbsp A FairTax rally in Orlando Florida on July 28 2006The creation of the FairTax began with a group of businessmen from Houston Texas who initially financed what has become the political advocacy group Americans For Fair Taxation AFFT which has grown into a large tax reform movement 4 30 This organization founded in 1994 claims to have spent over 20 million in research marketing lobbying and organizing efforts over a ten year period and is seeking to raise over 100 million more to promote the plan 93 AFFT includes a staff in Houston and a large group of volunteers who are working to get the FairTax enacted In 2007 Bruce Bartlett said the FairTax was devised by the Church of Scientology in the early 1990s 43 drawing comparisons between the tax policy and religious doctrine from the faith whose creation myth holds that an evil alien ruler known as Xenu used phony tax inspections as a guise for destroying his enemies 94 Representative John Linder told the Atlanta Journal Constitution that Bartlett confused the FairTax movement with the Scientology affiliated Citizens for an Alternative Tax System 95 which also seeks to abolish the federal income tax and replace it with a national retail sales tax Leo Linbeck AFFT Chairman and CEO stated As a founder of Americans For Fair Taxation I can state categorically however that Scientology played no role in the founding research or crafting of the legislation giving expression to the FairTax 93 Much support has been achieved by talk radio personality Neal Boortz 96 Boortz s book co authored by Georgia Congressman John Linder entitled The FairTax Book explains the proposal and spent time atop The New York Times Best Seller list Boortz stated that he donates his share of the proceeds to charity to promote the book 96 In addition Boortz and Linder have organized several FairTax rallies to publicize support for the plan Other media personalities have also assisted in growing grassroots support including former radio and TV talk show host Larry Elder radio host and former candidate for the 2012 GOP Presidential Nomination Herman Cain Fox News and radio host Sean Hannity and Fox Business Host John Stossel 97 The FairTax received additional visibility as one of the issues in the 2008 presidential election At a debate on June 30 2007 several Republican candidates were asked about their position on the FairTax and many responded that they would sign the bill into law if elected 31 The most vocal promoters of the FairTax during the 2008 primary elections were Republican candidate Mike Huckabee and Democratic candidate Mike Gravel The Internet blogosphere and electronic mailing lists have contributed to promoting organizing and gaining support for the FairTax In the 2012 Republican presidential primary and his ensuing Libertarian Party presidential run former Governor of New Mexico and businessman Gary Johnson actively campaigned for the FairTax 98 Former CEO of Godfather s Pizza Herman Cain had promoted the FairTax as a final step in a multiple phase tax reform 99 Outside of the United States the Christian Heritage Party of Canada adopted a FairTax proposal as part of their 2011 election platform 100 but has never been close to winning a seat in any election See also editAmericans For Fair Taxation Consumption tax Debates within libertarianism Georgist land value tax Hall Rabushka flat tax Optimal tax Single tax Tax reform Tax shiftNotes edit https fairtax org faq FAQ Is there any provision in the FAIRtax bill to prevent both an income tax and a sales tax a b c d e Fair Tax Act 2009 Chapter 3 a b c d e f g h Kotlikoff 2005 a b Linbeck statement 2005 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Regnier 2005 a b Fair Tax Act 2009 Chapter 1 a b c d e Gale 1998 a b c Tuerk et al 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k Tax Reform Panel Report Ch 9 a b c d e f Kotlikoff and Rapson 2006 a b c Kotlikoff and Jokisch 2007 a b c d e f g h i j The FairTax Book a b c Open Letter to the President a b c d Auerbach 2005 a b Sipos 2007 a b Gale 2005 a b c d Fair Tax Act 2009 Title III The FairTax Congressman Rob Woodall Archived from the original on 2015 02 05 Retrieved 2015 02 04 a b H R 25 108th Cosponsors a b S 1493 108th Cosponsors a b H R 25 109th Cosponsors a b S 25 109th Cosponsors a b c H R 25 110th Cosponsors S 1025 110th Cosponsors H R 25 111th Cosponsors S 296 111th Cosponsors H R 25 112th Cosponsors S 13 112th Cosponsors Bender 2005 a b c d e f g Boortz and Linder 2008 a b Davis 2007 CBS News 2007 Rasmussen Reports 2009 Obama 2008 2015 prebate a b c d e Rebuttal to Tax Panel Report 2006 Bartlett 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k Bartlett 2007 Tax Notes a b c d Yin 2006 Fla L Rev Linder and Boortz 2007 a b c d e Fair Tax Act 2009 Chapter 5 a b Miller 2007 a b c d Bartlett 2007 Wall Street Journal Gingrich and Ferrara 2005 a b c d e f g h i j k Bachman et al 2006 a b Burton and Mastromarco 1998 Burton and Mastromarco 1998a a b c d Arduin Laffer amp Moore Econometrics 2006 Altig et al 2001 a b c Tuerk et al 2007 Esenwein 2005 a b c Diamond and Zodrow 2008 a b c d e f Kotlikoff 2008 a b Fair Tax Act 2009 a b c Taranto 2007 Kotlikoff and Rapson 2006 Tuerk et al 2007 Zodrow and McClure 2006 Giuliani 2007 a b Vance 2005 a b Golob 1995 Tuerk et al 2007 Gaver 2006 Linbeck 2006a Linbeck 2007 Vargas 2005 a b c Buckley 2008 IRS Labor Force 2005 a b c d Taranto 2007a Fair Tax Act 2009 Chapter 8 Tuerck et al 2007 Types of Bonds Fair Tax Act 2009 Title IV a b Landsburg 1998 Forbes 2007 Jorgenson 1998 Boortz 2005 a b c Tuerck 2008 a b Fair Tax Act 2009 Chapter 2 McTague 2005 Schlosser 2004 a b c Taranto 2007 a b c d American Enterprise Institute 2007 Moffatt 2006 a b c Tuerck at el 2007 a b Fair Tax Act 2009 Chapter 4 California Legislative Analyst s Office Karvounis 2007 a b Fox and Murray 2005 Slemrod 2005 a b Worstall 2015 Fair Tax Act 2009 Chapter 7 a b Linbeck 2007 Bartlett Bruce 7 September 2007 Scientology s Fair Tax Plot CBS News Archived from the original on 13 December 2014 Retrieved 17 June 2015 Galloway 2007 a b Boortz 2005 Boortz 2006 Gary Johnson 2012 Campaign Site 2011 RedState 2011 Christian Heritage 2011References edit 18 Favor National Sales Tax 68 Oppose Rasmussen Reports 2009 05 29 Retrieved 2009 07 16 A Macroeconomic Analysis of the FairTax Proposal PDF Arduin Laffer amp Moore Econometrics February 2006 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 11 08 Retrieved 2006 11 07 Altig David Auerbach Alan J Kotlikoff Laurence J Smetters Kent A Walliser Jan June 2001 Simulating Fundamental Tax Reform in the United States PDF The American Economic Review 91 3 574 595 doi 10 1257 aer 91 3 574 S2CID 17787888 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 11 08 Retrieved 2008 07 17 An Open Letter to the President the Congress and the American people PDF Americans For Fair Taxation Archived from the original PDF on 2006 10 15 Retrieved 2006 07 23 Auerbach Alan J 2005 08 25 A Consumption Tax The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2008 02 05 Bachman Paul Haughton Jonathan Kotlikoff Laurence J Sanchez Penalver Alfonso Tuerck David G November 2006 Taxing Sales under the FairTax What Rate Works PDF Tax Notes Tax Analysis Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 14 Retrieved 2007 03 06 Bartlett Bruce 2007 12 08 FairTax Podcast with Bruce Bartlett The Tax Foundation Archived from the original on 2007 12 23 Retrieved 2007 12 20 Bartlett Bruce 2007 12 24 Why the FairTax Won t Work PDF Tax Notes Tax Analysts Retrieved 2007 12 30 Bartlett Bruce 2007 08 26 Fair Tax Flawed Tax The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 2015 03 10 Retrieved 2007 08 30 Bender Merrill 2005 06 01 Economists Back FairTax Proposal Budget amp Tax News The Heartland Institute Archived from the original on 2007 09 29 Retrieved 2006 07 20 Boortz Neal 2005 09 07 Nealz Nuze Cox Radio Archived from the original on 2006 08 31 Retrieved 2006 08 07 Boortz Neal 2005 09 15 The FairTax Straightening out some confusion Cox Radio Archived from the original on 2006 08 26 Retrieved 2006 08 04 Boortz Neal 2006 05 25 Nealz Nuze Cox Radio Archived from the original on 2007 02 03 Retrieved 2007 02 26 Boortz Neal Linder John 2006 The FairTax Book Paperback ed Regan Books ISBN 0 06 087549 6 Boortz Neal Linder John 2008 FairTax The Truth Answering the Critics Paperback ed HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 154046 2 Buckley Allen 2008 01 25 Fair Tax Ignores Economic Mathematical and Legal Realities to Buy Votes PDF Bureau of National Affairs 16 J1 J24 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 09 10 Retrieved 2008 08 08 Burton David Mastromarco Dan 1998 03 16 Rebuttal of the William Gale papers PDF The Argus Group Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 14 Retrieved 2006 10 26 Burton David Mastromarco Dan 1998 02 04 Rebuttal of the Joint Committee on Taxation JCT letter PDF The Argus Group Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 14 Retrieved 2006 10 26 California Sales Tax Enforcement Costs Analysis of the 2004 05 Budget Bill Legislative Analyst s Office February 2004 Retrieved 2006 07 25 CBS News 2007 10 04 McCain Wants Greenspan Dead Or Alive CBS News Retrieved 2008 07 15 Christian Heritage Party of Canada 2011 Better Solutions for the Economy Archived from the original on 2012 12 17 Retrieved 2012 12 20 Davis Teddy 2007 07 31 Thompson Flip Flops on Taxes ABC News Retrieved 2007 08 02 Diamond John W Zodrow George R 2008 05 05 The Impact of H R 25 on Housing and the Homebuilding Industry PDF James A Baker III Institute For Public Policy Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 02 Retrieved 2008 07 03 Edwards Chris April 2002 Top Ten Civil Liberties Abuses of the Income Tax PDF Cato Institute Retrieved 2007 07 13 Esenwein Gregg 2005 07 19 The Potential Distributional Effects of the Alternative Minimum Tax PDF Center for Democracy and Technology Archived from the original PDF on September 24 2005 Retrieved 2007 05 30 Fox William F Murray Matthew N 2005 05 13 A National Retail Sales Tax Consequences for the States PDF Symposium on State Tax Implications of Federal Tax Reform Retrieved 2008 01 19 Gale William March 1998 Don t Buy the Sales Tax The Brookings Institution Archived from the original on 2007 11 02 Retrieved 2007 12 22 Gale William 2005 05 16 The National Retail Sales Tax What Would The Rate Have To Be PDF Tax Notes Tax Analysis Archived from the original PDF on 2005 06 13 Retrieved 2005 06 15 Galloway Jim 2007 08 28 On John Linder and Scientology The Atlanta Journal Constitution Archived from the original on 2012 07 19 Retrieved 2007 08 30 Gardiner Pamela 2004 07 21 Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration Testimony U S Senate Committee on Finance Retrieved 2006 11 18 Gaver John 2006 01 10 The Economy Bomb Ticking Down Faster Action America Retrieved 2013 07 28 Gingrich Newt Ferrara Peter 2005 09 26 Doesn t Anyone Know the Score The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2008 07 04 Giuliani Rudy 2007 12 03 Rudy Giuliani Assails Fair Tax Plan Espoused by Rival Huckabee Fox News Archived from the original on 2008 01 06 Retrieved 2008 07 31 Golob John E 1995 How Would Tax Reform Affect Financial Markets PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 07 29 Retrieved 2007 01 22 H J RES 16 110th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2007 01 07 Archived from the original on 2020 04 26 Retrieved 2007 01 19 H R 25 108th Cosponsors 108th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2003 01 07 Archived from the original on 2016 07 04 Retrieved 2006 08 22 H R 25 109th Cosponsors 109th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2005 01 04 Archived from the original on 2016 07 04 Retrieved 2006 08 22 H R 25 110th Cosponsors 110th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2007 01 04 Archived from the original on 2016 07 04 Retrieved 2007 01 14 H R 25 111th Cosponsors 111th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2009 01 06 Archived from the original on 2016 07 04 Retrieved 2009 01 07 H R 25 112th Cosponsors 112th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2011 01 05 Archived from the original on 2016 07 03 Retrieved 2014 02 06 H R 25 Fair Tax Act of 2009 111th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2009 01 06 Archived from the original on 2020 04 26 Retrieved 2009 01 11 IRS Labor Force Compared to National Totals for Civilian and Federal Excel Internal Revenue Service 2005 Retrieved 2006 11 18 Jorgenson Dale W 1998 05 18 The Economic Impact of the National Retail Sales Tax U S House of Representatives Archived from the original PDF on 2009 07 25 Retrieved 2008 02 20 Karvounis Niko 2007 12 13 Mike Huckabee s Fair Tax Fallacies Mother Jones Archived from the original on 2008 01 19 Retrieved 2008 01 21 Kotlikoff Laurence 2005 03 07 The Case for the FairTax PDF The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original PDF on 2018 11 13 Retrieved 2006 07 23 Kotlikoff Laurence Rapson David December 2005 Comparing Average and Marginal Tax Rates under the FairTax and the Current System of Federal Taxation NBER Working Paper No 11831 doi 10 3386 w11831 Kotlikoff Laurence Jokisch Sabine 2007 04 24 Simulating the Dynamic Macroeconomic and Microeconomic Effects of the FairTax PDF Boston University amp Centre for European Economic Research Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 14 Retrieved 2007 05 13 Kotlikoff Laurence Rapson David December 2005 Would the FairTax Raise or Lower Marginal and Average Tax Rates PDF National Bureau of Economic Research Archived from the original PDF on 2006 09 01 Retrieved 2006 10 10 Kotlikoff Laurence J 2008 01 15 Why the Fair Tax Will Work PDF Boston University Archived from the original PDF on 2008 07 05 Retrieved 2008 01 17 Landsburg Steven 1998 Price Theory and Applications 4th edition Hardcover ed South Western Educational Publishing ISBN 0 538 88206 9 Linbeck Leo 2005 Committee on Ways and Means Hearing Statement of Leo Linbeck Committee on Ways and Means Archived from the original on 2005 11 28 Retrieved 2007 01 25 Linbeck Leo 2006 06 22 Testimony Before the Subcommittee on Select Revenue Measures House Committee on Ways and Means Archived from the original on 2012 03 29 Retrieved 2011 08 15 Linbeck Leo 2007 08 29 Be Fair to FairTax Throw the Red Herrings Back in the Water The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2007 09 02 Linbeck Leo 2007 12 26 FairTax Facts The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2008 08 13 Linder John Boortz Neal 2007 09 27 The Fair Tax Saying Goodbye to the Income Tax and the IRS American Solutions Archived from the original Video on 2007 12 14 Retrieved 2007 10 04 Mack Connie III Breaux John 2005 11 01 National Retail Sales Tax Chapter 9 PDF President s Advisory Panel for Federal Tax Reform Retrieved 2010 02 16 McTague Jim April 2005 The Underground Economy The Wall Street Journal Classroom Edition Barron s Archived from the original on 2006 07 18 Retrieved 2006 07 25 Miller Joe 2007 05 31 Unspinning the FairTax FactCheck org Retrieved 2008 01 17 Moffatt Mike 2006 FairTax Quandary About com Archived from the original on 2016 04 08 Retrieved 2006 09 06 Obama Barack 2008 06 10 A response from Senator Obama on the Fair Tax Act U S House of Representatives Archived from the original on 2008 06 25 Retrieved 2008 06 18 Regnier Pat 2005 09 07 Just how fair is the FairTax Money Magazine Retrieved 2006 07 20 S 13 112th Cosponsors 112th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2011 01 25 Retrieved 2014 02 07 permanent dead link S 25 109th Cosponsors 109th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2005 01 24 Archived from the original on 2016 07 04 Retrieved 2006 08 22 S 296 111th Cosponsors 111th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2009 01 22 Archived from the original on 2016 07 04 Retrieved 2009 01 25 S 1025 110th Cosponsors 110th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2007 03 29 Archived from the original on 2008 12 18 Retrieved 2007 04 04 S 1493 108th Cosponsors 108th U S Congress The Library of Congress 2003 07 30 Archived from the original on 2016 07 03 Retrieved 2006 08 22 Schlosser Eric 2004 04 01 Reefer Madness Sex Drugs and Cheap Labor in the American Black Market Reprint ed Mariner Books ISBN 978 0 618 44670 4 Simplifying tax systems The case for flat taxes The Economist Barron s 2005 04 14 Retrieved 2006 07 25 Sipos Thomas 2007 07 10 A Fair Tax for Progressives and Conservatives American Chronicle Archived from the original on 2007 11 10 Retrieved 2007 07 13 Slemrod Joel 2005 11 13 The Fairtax Book and Flat Tax Revolution 1040EZ Really Really EZ The New York Times Retrieved 2006 07 25 Taranto James 2007 12 17 Flailing the Fruga The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2007 12 20 Taranto James 2007 12 18 No Truck With Huck II The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2007 12 20 Taranto James 2007 12 10 Political Pandering The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2007 12 20 Tea partiers descend on D C Politico Reuters 2010 04 15 Retrieved 2010 09 16 The FairTax Prebate Explained PDF Americans For Fair Taxation FairTax org 2015 01 01 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 03 16 Retrieved 2015 05 21 Tuerck David G 2008 02 04 Memo to Bruce Bartlett Just Do The Math PDF Tax Notes Tax Analysis Retrieved 2008 02 23 Tuerck David G Haughton Jonathan Bachman Paul Sanchez Penalver Alfonso Viet Ngo Phuong February 2007 A Distributional Analysis of Adopting the FairTax A Comparison of the Current Tax System and the FairTax Plan PDF Beacon Hill Institute Retrieved 2007 09 16 Tuerck David Haughton Jonathan Bachman Paul Sanchez Penalver Alfonso February 2007 A Comparison of the FairTax Base and Rate with Other National Tax Reform Proposals PDF Beacon Hill Institute Retrieved 2007 09 09 Tuerck David Bachman Paul Jacob Sylvia September 2007 Fiscal Federalism The National FairTax and the States PDF Beacon Hill Institute Retrieved 2007 01 19 Tuerck David Bachman Paul Sanchez Penalver Alfonso September 2007 Tax Administration and Collection Costs The FairTax vs the Existing Federal Tax System PDF Beacon Hill Institute Retrieved 2008 01 13 Tuerck David G Haughton Jonathan Bhattarai Keshab Sanchez Penalver Alfonso Viet Ngo Phuong February 2007 The Economic Effects of the FairTax Results from the Beacon Hill Institute CGE Model PDF Beacon Hill Institute Retrieved 2007 09 18 Tuerck David G Haughton Jonathan Bachman Paul Sanchez Penalver Alfonso Dinwoodie Sara February 2007 The FairTax and Charitable Giving PDF Beacon Hill Institute Retrieved 2017 05 06 Types of Bonds SmartMoney com Yahoo Finance Archived from the original on 2006 04 09 Retrieved 2006 07 24 Vance Laurence 2005 05 18 The Fair Tax Fraud Ludwig von Mises Institute Retrieved 2008 08 14 Vargas Melody 2005 03 03 Retailers Question Greenspan on Consumption Tax PRNewswire National Retail Federation Archived from the original on 2020 04 26 Retrieved 2011 06 06 Viard Alan D Kotlikoff Laurence Gravelle Jane G Gale William G 2007 02 28 Taxing Sales under the FairTax What Rate Works American Enterprise Institute Archived from the original on 2020 01 13 Retrieved 2017 05 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Worstall Tim 2015 05 30 The Fair Tax Will Still Fail For All The Old Reasons Forbes Retrieved 2015 06 03 Wright Tom Walby Karen 2007 01 06 Rebuttal to the tax panel report and recommendations PDF Americans for Fair Taxation Archived from the original on 2014 03 07 Retrieved 2017 05 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Yin George K 2006 Is the Tax System Broken Beyond Reform Florida Law Review 58 doi 10 2139 ssrn 893888 S2CID 153620983 SSRN 893888 Further reading editKotlikoff Laurence Burns Scott 2004 The Coming Generational Storm What You Need to Know about America s Economic Future MIT Press ISBN 0 262 11286 8 McCaffery Edward J 2006 Fair Not Flat How to Make the Tax System Better and Simpler Paperback ed University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 55561 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Zodrow George R Mieszkowski Peter 2002 United States Tax Reform in the 21st Century Hardcover ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 80383 0 permanent dead link External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Taxation nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to FairTax H R 25 FairTax Act of 2013 Archived 2013 06 15 at the Wayback Machine Text of House bill H R 25 S 122 Fair Tax Act of 2013 Archived 2014 12 18 at the Wayback Machine Text of Senate bill S 122 Rob Woodall on the Fair Tax Rob Woodall The current sponsor of the Fair Tax on his bill Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title FairTax amp oldid 1213253584, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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