Anti-stance wrote:
Now where are all those other "not fair" things about the Fair tax you are talking about?
You have still failed to address the very unballanced tax burdon, that goes toward the people who have to spend more of their money to survive on, and even minus the "prebate", there will be an income that the income minus the prebate will have the highest tax rate thanks to the fact that it takes quite a bit of money to survive.
And a follow up to that, it also burdens families more than it does a person who can live alone. Since it takes money to raise kids, now we have families who will have more of a burdon paying taxes. Rich couples with no kids will end up with the lowest rate.
So not only does the "Fair tax" put the burdon on the middle-ish class, it also puts an extra burdon on families.
BTW, I don't see how your answer to my question about not vacationing in the US applies to anything. My point is that I make money in the US, and have just enough means to spend it outside of the country. There are a LOT of people who make more than I do, so the more means you have, the more ways that you can spend money and not pay this "fair tax".
Ok, some more holes- the whole "border" issues repsonse is funny. It's not an answer, and basically ignores the fact that border people will try to consume where the cost is less. Cost neutral is very untrue- just claiming it will be is dis-ingenuous. If a US company makes stuff in the US, and then sends it to Canada for sale, how does that magically become cost neutral? And if you believe that Canada will do nothing or help the US with this new law, recall prohibition- drinking was not legal in Canada, or was at least very restricted, but making was very legal- which resulted in Canada Club in Windsor Ontario. And lots of smuggling across the border. If Canada can profit by this law, they will.
Next up- I'm a corporation of one. Being a company, I can buy stuff from other companies without tax. Who is going to monitor my usage to prove that it's for corporarte use? You use the example of a plane- I can buy a corporate jet, and fly all over the place without paying a cent of tax on it. Or I need a Ferrari to get to work, and show a good corporate image for my dentist job- again, no tax- the corporation bought it. The FAQ says that it will be risky, but the big claim is that there won't be an IRS, but to effectively monitor this, we will be forced to pay for such service to prevent this kind of very easy fraud. Again, the bigger the company, the more reasons why it can be corporate, and again, a benefit to those with means to avoid paying taxes.
Then there's the whole black market. Since we already have one for cigarrettes, and a long standing one for moonshine, to pretend that there won't be a very big one is ignoring historical avoidance of taxes.
So to make "fair tax" really work well, you'll need a bunch of people looking over shoulders, making sure there are no cheaters, and a bunch of regulations to make sure that we don't find a lot more holes in the system to avoid paying taxes. which will be worse than what we have now.
Yea, that sucks.
The only reason what we have now doesn't work is because it has been manipulated to find more and more holes to avoid paying taxes. And it also gives advantages to certain ways to make money- both of which are bad. Fix the loop holes and keep all sources of earnings equal, and it will go back to working fine. Not perfect, but much easier to apply than the "fair tax".