bane wrote:Explain that? How can you possibly get more equal than having an equal tax percentage?
I'm talking about the distribution of wealth. Since the 70s the rich have been getting richer and everyone else has been getting poorer. The wealth in America is increasingly concentrated among the top 1 or 2 percent and that ain't no bullshit. A flat tax would most definitely accelerate that trend.
bane wrote:As to the deficit, do you really think the feds would take in less money? It's a pretty simple formula dude. The fed gets X dollars now, they'll get x dollars then. The only difference is how it's paid.
Okay, if they set a dollar amount on what they want to take in in revenues and then set the flat tax to achieve that, the only way it can be done is significantly raising taxes on the middle class - which would further accelerate the distribution of wealth toward those who need it the least. But those in favor of a flat tax are advocating lowering the top rate of tax and having everyone pay it at a certain level, which means (depending on where you set the bar) either that you take in a LOT less revenues or you absolutely soak the middle class.
Look at it this way: the top earners currently pay, what, 39 percent of their income in Federal income taxes? And the bulk of taxpayers pay something like 30 percent (I haven't looked this up)? Where do you flatten the tax? If you lower the percentage paid by the wealthiest to 30 percent, you take in less revenues. If you lower it to 35 percent and raise the middle class tax rates to 35, you greatly accelerate the redistribution of wealth toward the rich. If you lower it all the way to 20 percent like Steve Forbes advocated, you absolutely decimate tax revenues. And we've talked about the budget here often enough - it is not possible to cut spending enough to balance the budget if you also reduce tax revenues.
Here's an article explaining what happened when the Baltic states introduced a flat tax:
http://www.thebigmoney.com/articles/jud ... lat-lining
Deficits soared as tax revenues plummeted. After Russia instituted a flat tax, revenues rose for the first few years - because rich people stopped evading taxes. Once that trend leveled off, so did revenues. And you wouldn't get that same effect in the U.S., because the proportion of people who evade taxes is very small.
I remember thinking back when Steve Forbes was advocating this: of course he wants a flat tax at 20 percent, because he personally wants to pay much less in taxes!