Thursday, June 04, 2015

Tax Reform : Simplicity Rules the Day! Who Knew?

Oh my goodness - everyone has the patriotic opportunity to participate in the paying of taxes and at the same time don't have to file. Hey, how will the politicians be able to steal us blind and not have the opportunity to use the tax system to destroy the opposition?

Come on already, it's the American way of the politics of taxation. This system will totally cut out the politicians being able to create subjective classes that will do anything to curly favor with those that control the purse strings.

Oh no, what next? Our political representatives will actually have to go to work and actually solve problems without the big stick of IRS incentives and corruption?  What will become of our country? Yikes!

Real, Simple (and Transparent) Tax Reform
Source: Jeff Lerner, "Real, Simple (and Transparent) Tax Reform," National Center for Policy Analysis, June 2, 2015.

June 3, 2015

The crux of the U.S. tax problem is that the system is built upon "net income" — income after deductions, exclusions, limitations, credits, rate differentials and so forth — which does not achieve fairness, simplicity or transparency. The tax system today brings in approximately $3 trillion in tax revenue annually. The share of revenues from each component of the tax system varies from year to year, but on average: The biggest share of revenue, $1.4 trillion (about 45 percent), comes from individual income taxes. Another $1 trillion (about 35 percent), comes from payroll taxes that fund Social Security and Medicare. In a distant third place is the corporate income tax, which brings in $300 billion, or about 10 percent. The remaining 10 percent of tax revenue, another $300 billion, comes from a variety of sources: estate and gift taxes, excise taxes on fuel, alcohol, tobacco, firearms, air transportation and so on.

The complex current Internal Revenue Code along with Treasury Regulations, IRS Revenue Rulings, official opinions and judicial decisions comes at a huge cost - billions and billions of hours and dollars in compliance costs for individuals and businesses.

The solution is to replace the existing system with two very simple, broad-based taxes - one for individuals and another for business. For individuals, a 15 percent tax on gross wages — in addition to the already existing payroll tax — deducted from paychecks in the same fashion as the current payroll tax system, but with no wage cap. No tax on interest, dividends, capital gains or estates. For businesses, a simple 2 percent tax on all gross domestic business receipts. No individual tax returns need be filed. No complicated corporate tax return to file. No need for the IRS, other than perhaps a skeleton crew. No more lobbyists crowding the halls of Congress.

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