The only path to permanent real reform is a tax system that takes the power out of the hands of politicians - A Fair Tax or A Flat Tax. Without a permanent fixed system; it is impossible for us to get a handle on the fiscal mess we created. Stability and Sustainability first; then we can get our fiscal house in order.
Originally Posted by Whirlaway
It certainly would be nice to simplify and de-junk the tax system, and would be especially nice to diminish the IRS's ability to make life miserable for so many of us.
But what most FairTax supporters apparently fail to understand (or will not acknowledge) is that since it would be a
very regressive tax, it's as much of a political non-starter as one could possibly imagine. That's especially true in view of the dramatic increase in income inequality over the last four decades. If the idea ever started to get off the ground, any hint of popular support would collapse overnight when people discovered what a huge tax cut it would be for affluent taxpayers.
It should also be remembered that the FairTax wouldn't come remotely close to replacing the revenue produced by the current system. So a consumption tax would only be capable of replacing
part of our current tax system, not all of it.
To that end, a few conservative economists (Harvard's Robert Barro, for example) have suggested that it would be beneficial to replace the payroll tax and income taxes on about the bottom three deciles of the income distribution with a consumption tax, and levy a simplified flat tax on higher incomes. The point is that relative to the status quo, such a tax system would be far more efficient, would produce less of what we refer to as "deadweight loss," and would do less to disincentivize employment, investment, and production.
And huge piles of junk that have been added to the tax code over the last few decades could be hauled off.