TGLS wrote:Nevix wrote:Or people who stop earning at around $90,000 dollars because 100k caused a spike in tax rates.
Or the actual people I know who are in the below 10k bracket, and have to increase their income by a lump of several thousand (if not closer to 10k) because there are WAY too many holes between brackets.
A Flat Tax is the same no matter who pays it. If it's 10%, it's 10% for everyone, and it cuts out the compliance costs that add billions in tax compliance costs to businesses each year. Plus, this means that small businesses can plan around an exact percentage, as can big businesses too.
Is that how taxes work in your country? That's about the stupidest thing I've ever heard of! Where I live, you don't end up paying more tax on the lower portion of the income. For example, if the brackets were: (too lazy to look up)
- 0% <30k
10% 30-50k
20% 50-100k
30% >100k
The man who makes 31k only would have to pay 10% tax on the 1k, and the man who makes 91k, would pay 10% tax on 20k and 20% tax on 41k.
Nevix wrote:
The best thing the government can do is as little as possible to allow people to manage themselves and their businesses honestly.
Which is why during the 19th century there were only two economic depressions, because the government stayed out of commerce, while the 20th century onwards, with its higher regulation, was marked by periodic depressions. Wait, got that backwards.
Nevix wrote:
3: Corporate taxes are still paid by the consumer who pays the corporation their money for the product or service. Hence, corporate are a tax on consumers, not the company.
I'll grant that corporate taxes are (technically) paid by consumers, because consumers are the source of revenue for businesses. However, taxes are paid on net income. Raising prices (and thus raising net income) will only cause you to pay more tax. If you can increase prices to increase income, a business would be daft not to do that.
1: Due to the deductions, write offs, and other factors, the tax brackets do not work that way.
There are holes in the current tax structure where you will pay more for a time, get the next deduction, then reach another hole later on, based on whether or not you are married, or if you're single, and a variety of other factors.
Also, as I have mentioned before: Higher taxes on higher earners INVITES buying politicians and companies lobbying for a carve out.
So...yes. There ARE times when the tax code is that stupid, because it's so complex that even the IRS doesn't always give the same answer if called twice with the same question.
Hence my argument for simplicity.
2: We just had an 8 year "recovery" that was actually a depression, where the government encouraged the Federal Reserve to use "quantitative easing" (roundabout printing money) to prop up the economy temporarily and wreck the bond market.
Because the government at the time wanted to interfere and fix the market, while also adding thousands of new regulations that made compliance harder.
February's job creation was 330 thousand new jobs. A year and a half ago, it took a minimum of two months to create that same number of jobs.
The only differences are the current removal of regulations, and lower taxes, favoring businesses and growth.
The more regulations and higher taxes, the better the economy runs. "Running too hot" is a problem you WANT to have, because the other option is running too slow.
3: If your corporate tax rate is zero, you don't have to raise prices to compensate for the lost percentage of profits.
If your corporate rate if 20%, you have to raise prices enough to cover the 20% of profits lost to the government.
Corporate Taxes also encourage using as many loopholes as possible to reduce that tax burden, as well as spending more money to lobby to get more loopholes in the tax code put in, which is why the US tax code is such a complicated mess.