"Paying taxes is for the poor." ~Quote from my economics instructor (from 2 years ago), who drew in >$300k at that time through investments and real estate, and paid less than $1k in federal taxes. Trust me, this statement of his, and his gloating explanation of it caused him to lose some of my respect.... but it also stuck with me, and sparked my curiosity in this matter. I've thought about it on multiple occasions recently, and figured this was a perfect way to get some additional thoughts on the topic...
So what are the pro's/con's of a flat tax? We occasionally see discussion of it, but I've never really understood the "too cool for school" discussions that most authorities relate. ...now let the insight/opinions/thoughts flow in 3.... 2.... 1.... mark.
So my personal perspective says that it seems like a reasonably good way to go. I know that the policy is largely hated, but I don't fully understand why... It seems to me that it would be significantly simpler, and overall, would actually bring MORE tax inflow to the federal government. If absolutely EVERYONE paid taxes at exactly the same rate (for conversation, say 15%), then there wouldn't be question to how much you really owe. Eliminate tax breaks, loopholes, safe havens, etc. You make an income of $30k/year, you pay $4.5k in taxes. $25 million, then $3.75 million in taxes. No arguments, no complicated tax law, no expensive accountants (sorry to those here)--simple, equal, fair.
First argument I'll hear is that "fair" doesn't really apply... that 15% of a meager income is debilitating. So perhaps it could be a two-tier system (with no breaks, exemptions, credits, deductions, etc), where perhaps under $50k it's 10%, above that is 15%.
My point is that a flat tax rate, or basically a simple, no-questions-asked tax system without the loopholes, exemptions, credits, havens, etc. would be better for the country. The very wealthy would not be able to escape paying taxes on their millions and billions. Somehow, with our complicated system, the wealthy manage to avoid paying a fraction of what they really should (in spite of their supposed 35%+ tax bracket), and the poor often pay more than they actually need to out of ignorance, or not knowing the "loopholes" available to them.
I hope I have outlined my thoughts adequately... What doesn't make sense or isn't realistic is probably a result of my ignorance in the matter.
So I'd love to hear everyone's thoughts....
So what are the pro's/con's of a flat tax? We occasionally see discussion of it, but I've never really understood the "too cool for school" discussions that most authorities relate. ...now let the insight/opinions/thoughts flow in 3.... 2.... 1.... mark.
So my personal perspective says that it seems like a reasonably good way to go. I know that the policy is largely hated, but I don't fully understand why... It seems to me that it would be significantly simpler, and overall, would actually bring MORE tax inflow to the federal government. If absolutely EVERYONE paid taxes at exactly the same rate (for conversation, say 15%), then there wouldn't be question to how much you really owe. Eliminate tax breaks, loopholes, safe havens, etc. You make an income of $30k/year, you pay $4.5k in taxes. $25 million, then $3.75 million in taxes. No arguments, no complicated tax law, no expensive accountants (sorry to those here)--simple, equal, fair.
First argument I'll hear is that "fair" doesn't really apply... that 15% of a meager income is debilitating. So perhaps it could be a two-tier system (with no breaks, exemptions, credits, deductions, etc), where perhaps under $50k it's 10%, above that is 15%.
My point is that a flat tax rate, or basically a simple, no-questions-asked tax system without the loopholes, exemptions, credits, havens, etc. would be better for the country. The very wealthy would not be able to escape paying taxes on their millions and billions. Somehow, with our complicated system, the wealthy manage to avoid paying a fraction of what they really should (in spite of their supposed 35%+ tax bracket), and the poor often pay more than they actually need to out of ignorance, or not knowing the "loopholes" available to them.
I hope I have outlined my thoughts adequately... What doesn't make sense or isn't realistic is probably a result of my ignorance in the matter.
So I'd love to hear everyone's thoughts....
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