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Post |
Opinion
Making the Case for the Fair Tax
By: James R. Donnell
web posted April 2, 2013
GUEST OPINION - Time magazine reported
this week that the estimated tax gap - the amount of money the IRS
fails to collect due to misfiling or tax cheaters - is an
estimated $600 billion dollars. The fact that this money goes
uncollected ultimately increases the tax rates and the amount of money
that you and I pay.
An article from the 2002 study by the Government Accountability Office
showed that "fifty-six percent of [tax] returns prepared by a paid
preparer had errors in comparison to only forty-seven percent prepared
by the taxpayer." In short, over 50% of tax returns being filed in the
2002 study were wrong and we "only" had 53,280 pages of tax code back
then. Fast forward to 2012 and the code has grown to over 73,000 pages.
That's taxation without comprehension and it is only expanding the tax
gap.
Studies show that simplifying the code leads to better compliance. That
makes sense, but what makes a lot more sense is to throw out the entire
income tax code and switch to a national retail sales tax like that
proposed by the FairTax Bill - HR25 / S122.
The FairTax is simply a different way to collect taxes - by taxing
consumption rather than income. Under the FairTax plan the government
would collect the same amount of money without the complexities of the
income tax. In fact, the FairTax bill is only 133 pages double
spaced. The number of "filers" would be reduced from 150 million
individual returns to simple sales reports from approximately 20
million businesses.
Yes, it's possible to cheat a sales tax but, unlike income tax where it
takes only one person to cheat by not reporting or under-reporting
their income, a sales tax take two people to cheat - the person selling
and the person buying. In addition, the bill specifically
includes provisions to reward whistle-blowers which makes it a little
less likely people will cheat. Not to mention that well over 80% retail
sales are through big chain stores like Wal-mart or Target and they are
not going to risk their business by cheating the system. Used
items are not taxed under the FairTax so there's no compliance issue
there.
After 100 years of income tax, and the code growing from 400 pages in
1913 to over 73,000 pages last year, it's time we do something that
makes sense. Tweaking the code hasn't worked. Let's throw it out
and switch to the FairTax.
James R. Donnell
Cameron Park, CA
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