Federal Sales Tax
The purpose of the proposed Fair Tax Act of 2003 is "to promote freedom, fairness and economic opportunity by repealing the income tax and other taxes, abolishing the Internal Revenue Service, and enacting a national sales tax to be administered primarily by the states." (Boortz, 2003). Unfortunately, there are a lot of beliefs about the proposed legislation that simply aren't true. Fears range from inflation, lower economic growth, unpredictable revenue shortfalls and unfairness to the poor. This paper explains that these concerns are not only false, but that the exact opposite is true in most instances.
One of the common misperceptions of the Fair Tax Act is that it will fuel inflation and dramatically impact the demand for goods with high price elasticities. However, it's likely that the sales tax will have minimal impact on prices. This is because there are already embedded taxes on all products and services that are purchased at the retail level that are estimated to be around twenty-two percent of their costs (Boortz, 2003). This twenty-two percent represents the payroll taxes and corporate business and income taxes paid by manufacturers, shippers, wholesalers, merchandisers and retailers. So, with regard to prices, all The Fair Tax Act really accomplishes is a replacement of embedded taxes with an equivalent direct sales tax, producing no significant change in the prices of goods and services for the consumer.
Any change in prices would indirectly come from the lower interest rates that The Fair Tax Act is expected to produce. Economic researchers predict that interest rates would drop in the direction of the current tax-free interest rate as the tax differential between the pre-tax and the after-tax rates of return was removed (Burton and Mastromarco, 1997). It is difficult to estimate exactly how much interest rates would fall because demand for credit would rise as well,...
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