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[personal profile] forsyth
The following is the text of an email I sent to NPR's Marketplace show today, after they had a hack from the WSJ editorial page spouting nonsense straight out of the "Fairtax" book. Here's the article in question.

And my letter:
This morning, on the Marketplace Morning Report, you had Stephen Moore on, praising the benefits of a national sales tax.  His ideas and numbers come entirely from the book "FairTax" by Neal Boortz and John Linder.  And unfortunately, most of what he quoted is inaccurate or false.  A 23% sales tax would not replace all of the government income, the percentage was picked as near the maximum amount people would tolerate as a sales tax.  A national sales tax, despite his claim, would be extremely regressive and complex.  Most families who are out of the top 1% spend most of their income each year, which would make their net tax rate at LEAST 23%, plus the increases in cost that would come from this kind of tax.  Whereas the richest few don't spend all their money, which would make their net tax rate far below the 23% the rest of us would pay.  That hardly qualifies as "fair" by any stretch of the imagination.  And his idea of a $20,000 rebate for the sales tax spent?  That would be at least as complicated as the current income tax.  The rest of the work of tax collection would then be pushed on to the companies who sell products.  It would require just as much work, and we would still require the IRS to investigate cheats and other things.

His entire presentation was misleading at best, and outright false at worst.  The entire idea of a "fair" national sales tax is snake oil, designed to cover up for a gigantic tax cut for the rich and a tax hike for the rest of us, not any kind of serious policy suggestion.

Re: Actually

Date: 2007-09-11 06:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] forsythferret.livejournal.com
Well, for starters, knowing farms and farmers, there's pretty much no way a farm would be "totally self-sufficient". Farms use a lot of machinery and tools and fertilizer and seeds and so on. Most farmers are in debt up to their ears, while the "farm aid" is mostly going to big factory farms. Having a farmer spending almost nothing would require a total overhaul of the way we do agriculture.

First you said "refunded the tax up to the poverty level", now you're talking about a prebate, which is it? And how would the poverty level be calculated? And would either of these include the tax that would be paid on the money they're theoretically being given? Because then you could get into an infinite loop.

Yes, it's an inclusive rate. Which is why prices would go up 30%. Because the 23% includes the tax, so 23% of $1.30 is 30%. So even if I were to generously allow that 22% of all current prices is due to "compliance, corporate taxes, tax evasion, etc", the net effect is still that prices would go up. Which is going to screw over everybody whose actual tax rate on income doesn't make up for the increased prices. Which is a pretty big chunk of everybody, I suspect. And how exactly would the "FairTax" address tax evasion? It would just change it from people evading income tax to people evading a sales tax. Black market goods, and various kinds of tricks like "renting" things, or making temporary loans, or so on, could defeat the sales tax just as easily. Which would mean your claimed 22% would be even less of a "drop".

But the biggest single thing about the "FairTax", that makes it a complete scam, is how completely regressive it is. It shifts much of the tax burden off of the rich, who don't spend all their money, and on to the people who have to spend all they have just to get by. This is one of the key points, and one that you haven't addressed at all, nor has anything on your website with anything other than laughable claims that it's "progressive". Especially since I haven't seen anything addressing purchases such as stock, which would provide yet another way for the richest 1% to avoid paying any taxes.

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