Well, several people here have decided that certain things are undesirable. Wealth inequality is undesirable. Regressive taxes are undesirable. Influencing elections with lots of money is undesirable. Polluting the environment is undesirable. I think we pretty much all do this all the time. Not sure why you suddenly find the whole idea of who gets to decide what is undesirable a point worth making when you decide what is undesirable in this very post.
Please see my response to JayJay, this is very obviously not what we were talking about, as none of these things would be covered by a consumption tax.
Additionally, you are describing a regressive consumption tax. I specifically said we could implement a _progressive_ version of it.
Consumption taxes are nearly always regressive. If you can come up with a consumption tax that is truly progressive, less byzantine than a progressive income tax, and still bring in the necessary amount of revenue, I would not be averse to it.
Also, a consumption tax could utilize progressive rates in order to maintain "fairness." The more that someone spends on consumption, the more that the person will be taxed. The rate structure could look like the current bracket system, or a new bracket system could be implemented.
Yeah, that's going to be an easy one to implement at the cash register.[/sarcasm]
LinkedArticle said:
But that’s not the only way to do it and the more advanced ideas for a progressive consumption tax become rather more interesting. What will happen is that everyone fills in a tax form, very similar to the 1040 of today. You record your income, as usual, but all of that income that you have saved is deducted before whatever the tax rate is is applied. You can think of this as being a little like all of your savings, of any type at all, as being in a tax-free 401 (k) if you like. However, all of the money that you’ve taken out of your savings that year is added to your taxable income. Any profits, capital gains, dividends, interest, any of these are treated exactly the same as any other income. If you’ve kept them in savings then they are not taxed: if you’ve taken them out of savings and spent them on consumption then they are added to your other income and taxed at whatever rate.
Seriously, that's your answer? How the fuck is that progressive? You realize that the less income one has, the less they are able to save. So, everyone at the lower end, who cannot afford any savings, and spend every last penny earned on necessities, get everything taxed. No, not this bullshit tax idea from the rich fuckers at Forbes, not ever this.
KeepTalking said:
I don't dislike people holding on to wealth. That is not what it is about. The problem is, if I make $100,000 a year, and end up paying out $25,000 a year in taxes, I would expect the guy making $100,000,000 a year to pay $25,000,000 a year in taxes, but he isn't paying anywhere near that. He is maybe paying $15,000,000 a year at most, more likely paying far less.
Except we know this is BS based on the tax data we have available. I've posted about this before.
Rather than looking at rates, perhaps we should be looking at what the top 1%
actually pays. Also, I think we should be taxing people who have incomes in the millions at a higher rate than those who are making $234,700/yr. As the millions they are making get bigger, we should be taxing them even more.
Regardless, as mentioned previously, you can make my proposal, the progressive consumption tax, as progressive as your heart desires.
Your proposal, if it is the one linked in Forbes, is quite honestly shit. I don't see how you can make that progressive in any way. Simply put, the poor do not have savings. The middle class struggles to keep savings.
KeepTalking said:
It very much is holding onto wealth when the rich pay a smaller percent of their income as their income rises.
Then why didn't you say so instead of just talking about incomes only in the part I responded to?
I thought we were having a discussion. Discussions evolve as new thoughts and information are provided.
When income is taxed at a lower, or even the same, rate as that income reaches the highest levels, then the people with the highest income have more money to save, and can therefor hold onto more wealth.
And?
That is the situation we are in. We stop progressing the tax rate after $250,000, when there are people making millions. It is not working, so we need to tax people more as they make more.
KeepTalking said:
You don't cut anyone off from participating in the political process, as participation in the political process is not what is undesirable. You make it illegal for people to spend obscene amounts of money to influence the political process, because it is the amount of money that is being spent to influence the political process that is undesirable.
Well you'll have to get the constitution amended in that case.
That effort is being made. Maybe some day it will happen. More likely the 1% will be hanging in the streets before they allow their pet politicians to let it happen, though.
The SCOTUS has determined it to be an exercise of free speech.
Yes, Citizens United was a travesty. Money is not speech, despite how those conservative justices decided to legislate it from the bench.
Besides, you'll have to also ban money entering politics the very same from the groups you agree with: unions (by far the biggest campaign funder of the Democratic party), environmental groups, consumer rights groups, anti-war groups, etc.
This is where you will need to link to the posts I have made that say that the above groups should be exempt from the same laws (hint: you won't find them).
You'll also have to ban people making political movies (these cost money, you know). I guess Michael Moore will be out a job unless he can get everyone to participate in this movie voluntarily. Sounds like you want to kill the patient to remove the cancer.
I think political movies can still be made, just not those that are supporting or attacking a current candidate for office, and that are actually campaign contributions in disguise.