Genuine tax reform would be the second-best fiscal policy reform to boost economic growth.*
With a simple and fair tax system, we could get rid of high tax rates that penalize productive behavior. We could eliminate the double taxation that discourages saving and investment. And we could wipe out the rat’s nest of deductions, credits, exemptions, preferences, exclusions, and other loopholes that bribe people into making economically unwise decisions.
When pushing for tax reform, I normally cite the flat tax, but there are many roads that lead to Rome. I’ve also pointed out that other tax reform plans have similar attributes. Here’s what I wrote, for instance, when comparing the flat tax and national sales tax.
In simple terms, a national sales tax (such as the Fair Tax) is like a flat tax but with a different collection point. …the two plans are different sides of the same coin. The only difference is that the flat tax takes of slice of your income as you earn it and the sales tax takes a slice of your income as you spend it. But neither plan has any double taxation of income that is saved and invested. And neither plan has loopholes to lure people into making economically irrational decisions.
And even though I’m so hostile to the value-added tax that I almost foam at the mouth, I’ve even acknowledged that it would be a good system if you could somehow permanently eliminate all taxes on income.
…like the flat tax and national sales tax, it’s a single-rate system with no double taxation of income that is saved and invested
Some folks think my ecumenical attitude about tax reform is misguided. They argue, from a political perspective, that we won’t make progress unless we unify behind one plan.
That’s probably true at some point in the future, but I would argue that we first need discussion and debate about the principles of tax reform.
And that’s why I’m happy to see that the Heritage Foundation has published a new paper, authored by David Burton, that explains why the major tax reform plans are economically interchangeable.
The four leading conservative tax reform plans are the Hall–Rabushka flat tax, the new flat tax, a national sales tax, and a business transfer tax. Each is a consumption tax with an equivalent tax base. Except for secondary design choices and the choice of which taxes to replace, each would apply the same tax rate to raise a given amount of tax revenue. They would also have the same economic effects. The choice among them, therefore, rests on non-economic grounds.
Perhaps the most important part of that excerpt is where David asserts that all of the big tax reform proposals are consumption taxes.
This point deserves some elaboration. Here’s some of what I wrote on this same issue.
For all intents and purposes, a “consumption tax” is any system that avoids the mistake of double-taxing income that is saved and invested. Both the national sales tax and the value-added tax, for instance, are examples of consumption-based tax systems. But the flat tax also is a consumption tax. It isn’t collected at the cash register like a sales tax, but it has the same “tax base.”
Another way of saying the same thing it to point out that a “consumption tax” is simply a system where income is taxed only one time.
And that’s also true of the subtraction-method VAT, which David refers to as a BTT, along with the “new flat tax,” which is similar to the traditional flat tax except for the method used to prevent double taxation.
In his paper, David has some flowcharts to illustrate the similarities of the various tax reform plans.
Here’s the one for a national sales tax.
And here’s the one for the flat tax.
Let’s close by reminding ourselves about what’s wrong with the current system. Here’s a video produced by Professor Murray Sabrin at Ramapo College in New Jersey. I make a few appearances, beginning about 10-1/2 minutes into the film.
*The best fiscal policy reform would be dramatically shrinking the size of the federal government so that a far greater share of labor and capital in our economy could be allocated by market forces rather than by politicians and bureaucrats. Ideally, the federal government could be reduced to the limited “night watchman” functions envisioned by the Founding Fathers, in which case there would be no need for any broad-based tax.
P.S. Switching to another topic, regular readers know that I enjoy mocking politicians.
Well, I think if there was a “Politician of the Year” contest, we would have a winner. His name is Joe Morrissey. Here are some details from a Richmond newspaper.
Del. Joseph D. Morrissey, D-Henrico, preserved his legislative career for now but could find his license to practice law again in trouble after a dramatic plea Friday regarding his relationship with a 17-year-old office assistant. …Morrissey was being housed Friday night in Henrico Jail East in New Kent County, where he will be allowed to engage in a work-release program and maintain his legislative and legal duties, one of his lawyers said.
So he’s going to jail, but will still be a state lawmaker as part of a work-release program. Gee, his constituents must be proud.
By the way, you may be wondering about the “relationship” that the 57-year old Morrissey had with the 17-year old. Here are some of the details.
…the special prosecutor in the case told reporters that the now-18-year-old former associate of Morrissey is pregnant, “perhaps” with Morrissey’s child….Morrissey said he entered the plea to preserve his legislative duties, spare the alleged victim the difficulties of trial and to maintain his care of a 2-year-old child that he had out of wedlock.
So one illegitimate kid already and maybe another on the way. What a model citizen.
But there’s more.
As Richmond’s prosecutor in 1991, Morrissey punched a rival attorney in the face and wound up in jail. Two years later, he was indicted on a bribery charge for reducing charges in a rape case in exchange for a $25,000 payment to the victim. The charges were dropped, but his law license was suspended. He again had his law license suspended in 1998 and was put in jail for 90 days for improperly speaking to reporters during a drug case. He got into another fight in 1999 and was sentenced to 300 hours of community service. He tried to fake the number of hours he served, and was given another 90 days in jail, before finally being disbarred. He then practiced law overseas in Ireland and Australia before authorities discovered he had been disbarred, and he came back to Virginia, where he was elected to the General Assembly in 2007.
With a resume like that, no wonder he got elected. No need for on-the-job training!
P.P.S. I don’t know if I should admit this, but I dated a girl back in the 1990s that used to date Morrissey. I don’t know if that says something about her or something about me. But maybe after the PotL casts me aside, I should try to connect with one of Bill Clinton’s former paramours?
P.P.P.S. If you like mocking politicians, you can read about how the men and women in DC spend their time screwing us and wasting our money. We also have some examples of what people in Montana, Louisiana, Nevada, and Wyoming think about big-spending politicians. This little girl has a succinct message for our political masters, here are a couple of good images capturing the relationship between politicians and taxpayers, and here is a somewhat off-color Little Johnny joke. Speaking of risqué humor, here’s a portrayal of a politician and lobbyist interacting. Returning to G-rated material, you can read about the blind rabbit who finds a politician. And everyone enjoys political satire, as can be found in these excerpts from the always popular Dave Barry. Let’s not forgot to include this joke by doctors about the crowd in Washington. And last but not least, here’s the motivational motto of the average politician.
[…] to say, I will continue my efforts to educate voters and lawmakers in hopes that eventually there will be majorities that choose […]
[…] to say, I will continue my efforts to educate voters and lawmakers in hopes that eventually there will be majorities that choose […]
[…] the jargon of public-finance economists, both the flat tax and national sales tax are “consumption base” […]
[…] at a low rate. Both get rid of double taxation (in the jargon of economists, this means a “consumption base” system). And both eliminate corrupt and distorting […]
[…] to say, I will continue my efforts to educate voters and lawmakers in hopes that eventually there will be majorities that choose […]
[…] to say, I will continue my efforts to educate voters and lawmakers in hopes that eventually there will be majorities that choose […]
[…] If anything, I have even greater disdain for the IRS and our awful tax system. […]
[…] not a big fan of the Internal Revenue Service, but our awful (and anti-growth) tax system is mostly the fault of […]
[…] to say, I will continue my efforts to educate voters and lawmakers in hopes that eventually there will be majorities that choose […]
[…] to say, I will continue my efforts to educate voters and lawmakers in hopes that eventually there will be majorities that choose […]
[…] to say, I will continue my efforts to educate voters and lawmakers in hopes that eventually there will be majorities that choose a […]
[…] April 15 is usually the worst day of the year, giving Americans ample reasons to both laugh and cry.* […]
[…] April 15 is usually the worst day of the year, giving Americans ample reasons to both laugh and cry.* […]
[…] is easy to criticize the many types of bad tax policy in the United […]
[…] April 15 is usually the worst day of the year, giving Americans ample reasons to both laugh and cry.* […]
[…] April 15 is usually the worst day of the year, giving Americans ample reasons to both laugh and cry.* […]
[…] April 15 is usually the worst day of the year, giving Americans ample reasons to both laugh and cry.* […]
[…] Though I suppose we should be aware that a small tax can grow into a big tax (the original 1913 income tax had a top rate of just 7 percent and we all know that the internal revenue code has since morphed into an anti-growth monstrosity). […]
[…] Though I suppose we should be aware that a small tax can grow into a big tax (the original 1913 income tax had a top rate of just 7 percent and we all know that the internal revenue code has since morphed into an anti-growth monstrosity). […]
[…] it is possible to dramatically reduce the damage imposed by those levies. For instance, the personal income tax could be largely defanged […]
[…] used the video as an opportunity to explain that both plans effectively rip up the current internal revenue code. And both would solve the major problems that plague today’s income […]
[…] April 15 is usually the worst day of the year, giving Americans ample reasons to both laugh and cry.* […]
[…] April 15 is usually the worst day of the year, giving Americans ample reasons to both laugh and cry.* […]
[…] April 15 is usually the worst day of the year, giving Americans ample reasons to both laugh and cry.* […]
[…] the risk of understatement, I am not a fan of the Internal Revenue Service. But, as shown in this closing segment from a recent interview, I […]
[…] the risk of understatement, I am not a fan of the Internal Revenue Service. But, as shown in this closing segment from a recent interview, I […]
[…] making an irrelevant argument. Politicians who advocate the above taxes are not proposing to eliminate the income tax and repeal the 16th Amendment. Instead, they simply want to levy a new tax without fully […]
[…] Less-onerous personal income tax. […]
[…] Less-onerous personal income tax. […]
[…] Less-onerous personal income tax. […]
[…] Less-onerous personal income tax. […]
[…] Both answers are actually correct. The VAT is both a tax on consumption and a tax on income because – notwithstanding its other flaws – it has the right “tax base.” […]
[…] report also notes that America’s “progressive tax” is a weakness that undermines […]
[…] I criticize America’s wretched tax code (now slightly less worse because of the recent tax bill), I generally focus my ire on the […]
[…] thanks to the unfortunate mistake of the 16th Amendment, our wretched internal revenue code passes constitutional muster (though having the authority to tax is not the same as the authority […]
[…] the way, “consumption-base” is simply the jargon used by public-finance economists when referring to a tax system that doesn’t impose double taxation (i.e., extra layers of tax […]
[…] big-picture issues such as tax reform can capture the public’s attention (should we junk the IRS, instance, and adopt a flat […]
[…] work ethic – will choose to be less productive (especially because they also get hit with higher tax burdens to finance all the […]
[…] without representation wasn’t very appealing, but the cartoon makes a very good point about the downside of taxation with […]
[…] The current system, by contrast, is known as a “comprehensive income tax” with a “Haig-Simons” tax base. But that simply means a system that taxes some forms of income over and over again. […]
[…] if the 16th Amendment is repealed, and then replaced by something that unambiguously ensures that the income tax is permanently abolished. A nice goal, but I’m not holding my […]
The income tax is a Marxist concept.
[…] Those same words could be used to describe the welfare state, the EEOC, farm subsidies, the tax code, and just about everything else the government […]
[…] Those same words could be used to describe the welfare state, the EEOC, farm subsidies, the tax code, and just about everything else the government […]
[…] a prohibition on using a referendum to adopt a discriminatory “progressive” tax (too bad we don’t have such a provision in […]
[…] shrink the federal government back down to what the Founding Fathers envisioned, and 2) get rid of the IRS and all taxes on […]
Since we are all supposed to be treated equally in the eyes of the law, we should have a flat tax or a national sales tax. Progressive taxation advocates are hypocrites when they claim to advocate for that and yet preach of the need for equality.
[…] making an irrelevant argument. Politicians who advocate the above taxes are not proposing to eliminate the income tax and repeal the 16th Amendment. Instead, they simply want to levy a new tax without fully repealing […]
[…] internal revenue code is a reprehensible mess that torments taxpayers and undermines American […]
[…] I criticize America’s wretched tax code (now slightly less worse because of the recent tax bill), I generally focus my ire on the […]
[…] I criticize America’s wretched tax code (now slightly less worse because of the recent tax bill), I generally focus my ire on the […]
[…] I simply put forward a wish list of a few incremental reforms that would make an awful tax system somewhat less […]
[…] I simply put forward a wish list of a few incremental reforms that would make an awful tax system somewhat less […]
[…] have a fantasy of junking the entire corrupt tax system and adopting a simple and fair flat tax. I have an even bigger fantasy of shrinking the size and […]
[…] have a fantasy of junking the entire corrupt tax system and adopting a simple and fair flat […]
[…] The bottom line is that voting for tax reform probably does endanger GOP lawmakers from high-tax states, which is the message that the leftists at Vox are peddling in hopes of preserving the awful status quo. […]
[…] compared to today’s wretched and unfair tax code, there are some very positive […]
[…] produce a lot of revenue to “offset” the cost of lowering tax rates and making our awful tax system less onerous. Plus, the deduction is unfair and inconsistent with principles of good […]
[…] the poor track record of the Federal Reserve, the corruption of Washington insiders, and the brutality of the income tax and IRS, can we really fault Doofus for being distracted from amorous […]
[…] the good news is that the VAT – when compared to the internal revenue code – is a less-destructive way of generating […]
[…] the good news is that the VAT – when compared to the internal revenue code – is a less-destructive way of generating […]
[…] World: We replace the convoluted, punitive, and corrupt internal revenue code with a simple and fair flat […]
[…] I realize there’s zero hope of ripping up America’s awful tax code and getting a simple and fair flat tax, I’m nonetheless hopeful that there will be some […]
[…] internal revenue code is a reprehensible mess that torments taxpayers and undermines American […]
[…] internal revenue code is a reprehensible mess that torments taxpayers and undermines American […]
[…] internal revenue code is a reprehensible mess that torments taxpayers and undermines American […]
[…] internal revenue code is a reprehensible mess that torments taxpayers and undermines American […]
[…] don’t like the income tax that’s been imposed by our overlords in Washington. Indeed, I’ve speculated […]
[…] don’t like the income tax that’s been imposed by our overlords in Washington. Indeed, I’ve […]
[…] federal income tax is corrosive and destructive. It’s almost as if a group of malicious people decided to deliberately design a system that […]
[…] federal income tax is corrosive and destructive. It’s almost as if a group of malicious people decided to deliberately design a system that […]
[…] federal income tax is corrosive and destructive. It’s almost as if a group of malicious people decided to deliberately design a system that […]
[…] Because I’m worried about the future of the nation, I want a national discussion and debate about big issues such as the entitlement crisis and our insane tax code. […]
[…] And I confess that I’m jealous that other nations have adopted this common-sense reform while we’re still stuck with a punitive and unfair internal revenue code. […]
[…] or “comprehensive income tax” approach, which is based on the notion that extra layers of tax should be imposed on income that is saved an invested. These people want double taxation because it is consistent with their views of fairness. Advocates […]
[…] back to the mess we have now. I like to think the American people, after finally being freed from today’s awful system, would vigorously fight to preserve the flat tax. But I also confess there are no guarantees. But […]
[…] one of the few places in the world that doesn’t have an income tax. No personal income tax (I’m jealous). No corporate income tax (I’m jealous). No capital gains tax (I’m jealous). No death […]
Nedlandp, read my citation of the fact that income tax was struck down in 1894 and where I cited the fact that the required number of states to ratify it was never met. So, if the required number of states to ratify the 16th Amendment was never met and the income tax was ruled Unconstitutional in 1894, then the income tax is logically Unconstitutional and illegal.
Jeffrey
If you are referring to my 12/16/14 comment, you didn’t read it carefully.
I’m totally against double taxation, except when taxes are embedded in the cost of corporate perks. The owner of a sky-box pays taxes which are embedded in the cost. Not allowing a deduction for sky-boxes is in fact double taxation, but that fact is just a quibble and I shouldn’t have brought it up.
However, there are those who would argue that the cost of a sky-box is a cost of doing business. My point is that if you are going to eliminate tax deductions for personal income tax, you should also eliminate deductions that are clearly perks at the corporate level.
Nedlandp, the economic impact of double taxation is economically devastating.
[…] are rumors that very dodgy characters sometimes show up on campuses, so who am I to question the need for heavy […]
If people read Article 1, section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, the income tax was prohibited. Also, in 1894, income tax was struck down. One more detail worth mentioning is that the requisite number of states to ratify the 16th Amendment was never met. So the income tax is essentially illegal.
[…] And that’s exactly what happened and today we’re burden with a grossly unjust and punitive tax code. […]
[…] Much of my work on fiscal policy is focused on educating audiences about the long-run benefits of small government and modest taxation. […]
[…] Much of my work on fiscal policy is focused on educating audiences about the long-run benefits of small government and modest taxation. […]
[…] for Politician of the Year, the winner would be the state legislator mentioned in the postscript to this column. Bribery, prison, and potential statutory rape are a potent […]
[…] for Politician of the Year, the winner would be the state legislator mentioned in the postscript to this column. Bribery, prison, and potential statutory rape are a potent […]
[…] all pro-growth tax reform plans tax income only one time, either when earned or when spent, which means those plans all are consumption-base taxes in the […]
[…] all pro-growth tax reform plans tax income only one time, either when earned or when spent, which means those plans all are consumption-base taxes in the […]
[…] all pro-growth tax reform plans tax income only one time, either when earned or when spent, which means those plans all are consumption-base taxes in the […]
[…] burdensome modern income tax would be impossible if government didn’t have information on our income and […]
[…] All three features are equally important, sort of akin to the legs of a stool. And if we succeeded with fundamental reform, it would mean an end to the disgraceful internal revenue code. […]
Dan, while I agree that consumers pay all of these taxes, you noted in a previous post that these taxes are not the same.
For example, a National Sales Tax (NST) takes into consideration only final sales price in the calculation of tax. However, in moving from an income tax to a NST, gross salaries are artificially inflated by the previous tax, so the NST taxes a tax. For an NST to be equal to the other taxes, gross salaries would have to be reduced to previous after-tax amounts.
There is a very loose interpretation of “investment” in the analysis. Are expenses and investments the same? Is a sky-box and cigars at a football game an investment or a business expense perk for executives? If the purpose of a flat tax is to get rid of special tax handling for elites, do we really want to continue expensing corporate perks?
A hybrid single tax rate approach is necessary:
– Salaries must be subject to the flat tax to avoid the problems above and to continually remind workers of the tax rate, to create downward political pressure on that tax rate.
– Domestic components (broadly defined to include capital items) required in the development of the product or service should be taxed where manufactured.
– Total sales should be taxed at the corporate level, minus salaries and domestic components, since both have already been taxed.
This approach will create some double taxation, since the price of the sky-box has already been taxed, but no system is perfect.
First of all, let’s not confuse progressive taxes automatically with our awful tax code.
Progressivity relates to effective tax rates. For example, a 25% flat tax with a $20,000 standard deduction would be a progressive tax, since the effective tax rates get progressively higher as income goes up, above $20,000.
The same would be true for a prebate of $5,000 and a 25% flat tax; however, whereas above those with incomes below $20,000 have a 0% effective tax, the prebate results in a negative effective tax rate.
There are those that might object to “giving people money”, but we’re doing that already through our horrendous welfare system, which is filtered through the bureaucrats and creates disincentives (benefit cliffs) when someone tries to escape. Since a prebate can never be lost, an individual always keeps 75% of earned income (at the federal level).
None of the proposed single rate taxes will pass politically, without some form of progressivity. Not with the “99%” telling them how unfair such a system would be. I don’t even think many of the “1%” believe they should pay the same effective tax rate as someone earning $5,000 annually.
Reblogged this on IF THE TRUTH BE KNOWN…BLOGGING BAD w/Gunny.G….
Reblogged this on Public Secrets and commented:
Tax reform along the lines of some sort of flat tax or a national sales tax, along with reduction in the size of government, would go a long way towards generating prosperity here again. It would also make statist heads explode — a win-win situation!
Dear Mr.Mitchell,overall you are a very smart,rational,decent and occasionally funny man.I tend to agree with a vast amount of what youre disseminating so….i can only say…Merry Christmas in advance.