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Old May 28th 11, 12:51 AM posted to talk.politics.guns,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.rush-limbaugh,rec.radio.shortwave,alt.conspiracy
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Posts: 159
Default Financial wealth, or JUST WHO SHOULD PAY FOR ALL OF THIS?

"Scout" wrote in
:



"gfn" wrote in message
..
.
On May 27, 3:02 pm, RD Sandman wrote:
gfn wrote
.
com:

On May 27, 12:23’pm, RD Sandman
wrote:
gfn wrote
innews:bf37633e-1273-4515-a00a-0a9570f6b140@
l18g2000yql.googlegroups.com:

Let's get rid of a lot crap and get down to the chase and the point
I am trying to make.

You keep stating that there will be 23% of the product cost removed
when Fair Tax is implemented, therefore the 23% of the Fair Tax will
simply bring the product back to the same price. You say that
research has shown that.

Now, let's look at the FAQ. It says that the Fair Tax will be
*revenue* neutral. It does NOT say it will be *cost* neutral. That
is YOUR claim, not theirs. Revenue neutral means that the amount of
tax revenue produced by the Fair Tax will be the same as current
practice provide. Cost neutral would indicate that cost of the
product to the public would not change. A statement that they do
not make.

Here is what the FAIR Tax FAQ says:

"Does the FairTax rate need to be much higher to be revenue neutral?

The proper tax rate has been carefully worked out; 23 percent does
the job of: (1) raising the same amount of federal funds as are
raised by the current system, (2) paying the universal rebate, and
(3) paying the collection fees to retailers and state governments.
Unlike some other proposals, this rate has been independently
confirmed by several different, nonpartisan institutions across the
country. Detailed calculations are available from FairTax.org. "

Note that it says, "..revenue neutral."

Let's try another spot:

"How does the FairTax affect wages and prices?

Americans who produce goods and earn wages must pay significant tax
and compliance costs under the current federal income tax. These
taxes and costs both reduce after-tax wages and profits and are then
passed on to the consumers of those goods and services in the form
of price increases. When the FairTax removes income, capital gains,
payroll, and estate and gift taxes, the pre-FairTax prices of these
goods and services will fall. The removal of these hidden taxes may
also allow wages to rise. Exactly how much prices will fall and
wages will rise depends on market forces. For example, in a
profession with many jobs and too few to fill them, wages will
likely increase more than in fields where there are too many
employees and not enough jobs."

Note again that it does not name a percentage for any cost
reduction. It says it will vary depending on market forces.

Here is another spot:

"
Since the FairTax plan is *revenue neutral*, the same amount of
resources is extracted from the economy as is extracted under
current law. These funds are, however, extracted in a less
economically damaging way. Every known economic projection shows the
economy doing better, often much better, under the FairTax.
Because the economy grows, is more efficient and more productive,
that means investment, wages, and consumption are higher than they
are under the income tax."

Again, it says "revenue neutral" not cost neutral. The research that
they claim the 23% number on is for revenue neutrality. That number
has nothing to do with product prices or costs.


Yes it does. The 23% is the embedded compliance "costs".


Cite where they specifically state that.




That is the same thing I have been asking him for. I know how the 23%
figure for the Fair Tax got calculated, I just want to know where that
23% figure he claims is in the cost of all products is worked out. Where
did THAT number come from. Methinks he is misreading something..

--
Sleep well tonight....RD (The Sandman)

If you woke up this morning....
Don't complain.
 
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