Making a flat rate in itself would be a drop in the bucket towards the goal of making the tax code simpler.
The complexity comes from all the intricacies involved with compiling all of the numbers that the rates are applied to, not the rates themselves.
I assume that you are implying that a flat tax would make lots of other changes besides a flat tax rate, but I am not sure what. Now, if by flat rate, you are advocating eliminating all deductions and credits, that would be an improvement from a simplification standpoint. Good luck with that, I would be for it. You realize that practically every organization related to health care, charity, religion, and education would scream bloody murder. So would any company connected to the housing market, and half the general population regarding the real estate deductions alone, and all local and state governments.
However, a lot of complication would remain. You would still have the all the complications involving the self-employed, partnerships, corporations, international workers, offshore tax havens, investment income, for starters. Are you proposing elimination of all private and public retirement savings programs? How are banks, brokerage, and insurance companies effected? Health care? Are you offering alternatives to programs that eliminated? Are all forms of income now taxed at the same rate ? (That is an interesting idea, maybe you are on to something.) Is the flat tax going to magically undue every special rule , benefit , or exception that our tax code has established in the last 300 years for every group or industry? Are state , city and local taxes going to disappear under a Federal flat tax system?
I am all for simplification, but there is a lot more to it than just saying let's have a flat tax.
The complexity comes from all the intricacies involved with compiling all of the numbers that the rates are applied to, not the rates themselves.
I assume that you are implying that a flat tax would make lots of other changes besides a flat tax rate, but I am not sure what. Now, if by flat rate, you are advocating eliminating all deductions and credits, that would be an improvement from a simplification standpoint. Good luck with that, I would be for it. You realize that practically every organization related to health care, charity, religion, and education would scream bloody murder. So would any company connected to the housing market, and half the general population regarding the real estate deductions alone, and all local and state governments.
However, a lot of complication would remain. You would still have the all the complications involving the self-employed, partnerships, corporations, international workers, offshore tax havens, investment income, for starters. Are you proposing elimination of all private and public retirement savings programs? How are banks, brokerage, and insurance companies effected? Health care? Are you offering alternatives to programs that eliminated? Are all forms of income now taxed at the same rate ? (That is an interesting idea, maybe you are on to something.) Is the flat tax going to magically undue every special rule , benefit , or exception that our tax code has established in the last 300 years for every group or industry? Are state , city and local taxes going to disappear under a Federal flat tax system?
I am all for simplification, but there is a lot more to it than just saying let's have a flat tax.
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