CaptainMidnight, are you saying there is a greater chance of tax evasion under the FairTax than the current system?
Of course some people will cheat, but the opportunity does not present itself as readily as in the FairTax. Some small shops may cheat, but a retailer or service provider would not have to get very large before any cheating would become readily apparent. Unlike our current system where multiple BILLIONS are lost to evaders. Every year.
Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
I'm not sure whether tax evasion would be greater than under the present system, but doubt that the means, motive, and opportunity would be reduced in any way. Just consider the high rate of tax that would be paid on
sales (not net pretax income), and it's hard to believe that a few percentage points of revenue wouldn't just take a little detour around the cash register. After all, some of it does so already.
That part wouldn't change!
Now consider just a couple of further points. Illegal tax evasion in the U.S. is actually estimated to be in the multiple
hundreds of billions of dollars annually, not just multiple billions. Note that if the FairTax is to be revenue-neutral, as claimed by its supporters, it would have to raise as much (net of evasion) revenue as the present system
actually raises, not what it would raise in the absence of evasion. Likewise, the important thing to consider is what a replacement tax system would raise net of evasion. Then note that after the "prebate" is paid out, the FairTax would have to raise about 22% of GDP on a gross basis in order to equal the long-term trend average of the present system (which itself lands well short of covering today's levels of federal spending, but that's another issue). Doing so with a 30% consumption tax not only leaves room for
zero losses due to evasion, it assumes a taxable base that's
actually higher than aggregate consumption in the U.S. (estimated to be approx. 70% of GDP in recent years). So even with NO illegal evasion and with the wind blowing from exactly the right direction at all times, I fail to see how the FairTax gets to revenue-neutrality.
And I'm having trouble finding the actual math discussing embedded taxes, but I think it is apparent that there is a number. This was discussed in the book, and the research was cited. But there can be no denying that a certain portion of the price of everything is tax and tax compliance costs which need to be recovered. And if those expenses disappear, then the business can lower their price and make the same profit. If a tax is levied roughly equal to the embedded tax costs, they will still make the same profit. And the government will receive more actual cash from the transaction, because they will receive amounts previously paid to tax professionals to ensure compliance.
Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
The reason you might have trouble finding math supporting the embedded taxes argument in the FairTax book (assuming that you're referring to the Boortz-Linder bestseller) or on the website is that the authors make the fanciful claim that elimination of those taxes would more or less equal the FairTax that would be applied upon sale, so that the final result would be that prices would not rise. And then they move blithely on in the apparent hope that no one will ask any critical questions and just accept all this hocus-pocus at face value. A very brief explanation of how the math works was offered back in post #25:
http://www.eccie.net/showpost.php?p=...6&postcount=25
If you didn't do so before, please consider the points I made and you should be able to see that embedded taxes that would disappear if the current system were replaced with the FairTax are miniscule in comparison with the latter.
Recall also that the FairTax website makes the rather startling claim that every income group would be better off under their plan, while none would be worse off. Again, do you not see a slight problem with this logical inconsistency?
I'm not from Missouri, but I do have a "show me" attitude about this sort of thing. If you take a few minutes to think this through, it should be clear to you that much of the stuff presented in the Boortz-Linder book and on the FairTax.org website is simply sleight of hand.
"TANSTAAFL"