Monday, January 7, 2008

The Not-So-Fair Tax

When Mike Huckabee won the Republican Caucus in Iowa last week, a cheer went up from one particular fringe group: the Americans For Fair Taxation. They proclaimed that "The Fair Tax Wins In Iowa!" I've heard Huckabee mention the "Fair" Tax before, so I decided to investigate.

The "Fair" Tax would eliminate the payroll taxes that most Americans have deducted from their checks. Personal income tax and social security taxes would no longer be withheld. More interestingly, the "Fair" Tax would eliminate taxes such as the estate tax, gift tax, capital gains tax and all commercial real-estate transaction taxes. My assumption going in was that the "Fair" Tax was a scheme to shift the tax burden from the wealthy to the middle class and poor, and it appears that the primary goal is to create a system where wealthy people can accumulate wealth without paying taxes on it, and then pass it along to their heirs without them having to pay taxes on it.

I wanted to do a thorough evaluation of the "Fair" Tax, but there is so much to it that I'd have to dedicate all of my time to deciphering the reports that the Americans For Fair Taxation have paid to have produced. Instead, I chose one claim that struck me as particularly dubious and decided to look into it.

One of the things mentioned over and over in the literature is that the "Fair" Tax is progressive. They claim that they have worked in a way to make it less of a burden on poor people, as opposed to a standard flat tax, which would disproportionately target the lower income brackets. The way they fix it is to send everyone a check once a month, equal to the 1/12th of the "Fair" Tax payments on purchases up to the poverty level. A single person, for example, would get a check for about $196 per month. That way, nobody is paying taxes on life's necessities, or so they claim.

I wondered how it could be that a sales tax that would produce a 30% increase in the cost of all goods and services that people buy (excluding "used" items) could possibly be a larger burden on the wealthy. So I checked out one of the reports that the "Fair" Tax people paid for, titled "A Distributional Analysis of Adopting the FairTax." What I found was not very surprising at all.

"Oh, people can come up with statistics to prove anything, Kent. Forty percent of people know that." -Homer Simpson

From page 4 of the report:

We argue that current expenditure is a better measure of an individual’s well-being than current income. This is because current expenditure is more closely related to lifetime income than is current income and is less subject to temporary shocks. Current expenditure is also a better measure of wealth, since people may live off their savings while undergoing a temporary drop in income. Therefore, we conclude that the FairTax, with the prebate, is more progressive than the current tax law.


There, in a nutshell, is how the "Fair" Tax crowd can claim their plan is progressive. If you spend more money, your "well being" is greater than if you spend less money. (Would anyone other than the rich come up with that?) By their logic, if you take two people who each earn $50,000 per year, the one whose expenditures are $70,000 per year is twice as well off as the one whose expenditures are $35,000 per year. Magical conservathink. Spend yourself into debt to be better off.

On page 19 of the report, in section IV. Distribution on a per Capita Basis, there is an interesting finding:

As noted before, even people in the poorest income per capita deciles have relatively high levels of expenditure per capita. The introduction of the FairTax would not favor these people; they would gain little from the abolition of taxes on income (because their incomes are low), but would pay the FairTax (because their expenditures are substantial), as shown in column (M). This effect is attenuated when the dynamic expenditure-expanding effects of the FairTax are taken into account, but the poorest half of the population (as measured by income per capita) would be worse off due to the FairTax. A similar conclusion emerges from an examination of the pattern of income per capita, shown in columns (Q) through (V) in Table 9. [Emphasis Added.]


So the group's own report states flat out that when you look at the numbers on the basis of income rather than expenditures, the "Fair" Tax actually hurts the poorest half of the population. How is that progressive, again?

And then, to perhaps water down the bitter taste from the report's conclusion, they add:

Note the very low average income of those in the poorest income per capita decile – just $1,243 in 2001 – which is surely a poor measure of the well-being of this group of the population.


Because really, how could you judge someone's well-being by the fact that they live in abject poverty? As long as they're spending lots, then they're A-OK.

11 comments:

Nikki said...

hey Mike my husband and I have been talking a lot about this since he is in the "tax" business. He works for a company that does R&D tax credits for manufacturing companies. They sell a credit that is not taken by small companies because CPA's don't know the code. So what he pointed out to me was that no matter what the government wants to pass on taxes, there are always those smarter than the government who can get around whatever the code may be. Of course that would be the corporate side and not joe citizen. needless to say Huckster can't put his money where his mouth is. Arkansas doesn't have a fair tax. wanting it and getting are 2 different things. blow hards all of them.
great read. Nikki

Nikki said...

Hey Mike I see I have moved up in the ranks........hooray!!! thanks for giving me "like" status! let's get some more posts going........who is your candidate? anyone tickling your fancy? N :)

DavidFL10 said...

Why would you write that?

The white paper you are citing is a study done by Beacon Hill, one of the most prestigious economic institutions in the country. They are not the "FairTax crowd", although they are indicative of the fact that nearly every economist who looks at the FairTax concludes that it would be good for America. Did you even read the study or did you just look at that table?

You may not be lying per se, but you certainly are cherry picking data from a report and claiming they say something very different from what they say.

The very point of the section of the report you are citing is to prove that to analyze the data on a per-capita income basis is hideously flawed.

In the latest essay by renowned economist Laurence Kotlikoff he used Bill Gates as an example: "His resources run into the tens of billions of dollars, but his current income could well be zero (even negative) because of poor performance of Microsoft stock or his other financial holdings. The Treasury would, nonetheless, classify Bill Gates together with the homeless as among the poorest households in America. Were one to divide Gates' putative FairTax payments by his income of zero, the implied average tax rate would be infinite; i.e., one of the nation's richest men, if not its richest, would be viewed, in this hypothetical, as among its poorest and judged as being taxed at an astronomical rate. "

Why do so many on the correct (not right) side of the political line keep defending a system that lets most of the people who have already become millionaires off the hook?

Mike H said...

David,

The reason I would write that is I disagree with what Beacon Hill says. They are a conservative think tank, whose mission is "Grounded in the principles of limited government, fiscal responsibility and free markets." They have approached this analysis with an obvious bias. Seems only right that I should be allowed to, as well.

And yes, I read the study. I disagree with their main contention, which is that the "Fair" Tax is progressive, because I disagree with their other main contention, which is that using a person's spending is a better indicator of well-being than a person's income.

As for the Bill Gates example, I think it's a good indicator of how skewed the term "progressive" has become. Just because a rich person pays more dollars in taxes than a middle class person, doesn't make it progressive. For example, if a person making $50,000 per year pays tax on 80% of his income because he spends almost all of what he earns, but gets a prebate to even things out, and Bill Gates is taxed on 10% of his income because he puts the rest in the bank, how is that progressive? Sure, Gates pays more in real dollars, but the middle class is still getting hit with a much larger burden.

That's why I say that the "Fair" Tax is neither fair nor progressive.

Thanks for the comment.

DavidFL10 said...

Mike,
You are still completely missing the point the Beacon Hill study was making.
In a bad year for Microsoft, Gates could have zero income. In that year, he will pay zero income taxes. He will still be living quite well and consuming quite a lot. Why do you want to untax him?
The FairTax will raise taxes for people who are spending more than they earn. You took that to mean the family making 30K who goes into credit card debt. That is not at all who FairTaxers are talking about. Indeed, at that level, they would be almost completely covered by the prebate.
The study is talking about people who are spending previously accumulated wealth.
I also have a problem with people who have their income so well hidden under today's system that they have more new funds available every year to spend than they report.
David

Mike H said...

David,

One of the main flaws in the logic of the "Fair" Tax is stated by Kotlikoff in that article that you (I think) pointed to on the Prospect site.

He claims that "remaining lifetime consumption, C, equals remaining lifetime income, R..."

The assumption is that all money will eventually be spent. This is a basic flaw that undermines the whole premise of the "Fair" Tax's progressiveness. Rich people don't stay rich by spending all their money. Have Sam Walton's children spent all his money? No. They live off the interest. Under the "Fair" Tax, Sam Walton's money will probably never be taxed. His children's income will probably never be taxed. Their children's income will probably never be taxed, and on down the line.

Under the "Fair" Tax, a middle class person's income will be taxed, usually in the same year it is earned. Then their savings will be taxed when they need to withdraw money and spend it, then their retirement savings will be taxed when they retire.

So Kotlikoff's assertion that C=R is basically true for the poor and the middle class (and the irresponsible rich), but it is patently untrue for rich people like Bill Gates.

I think that using Gates as an example of how the "Fair" Tax is progressive is flawed as well. If Gates earns $2.5 Billion per year, under the current law, he is taxed 35 or 40% of that every year. Over ten years, he will pay around $8 Billion in taxes. If he has one bad year and has zero income (which would never happen, but for the sake of argument let's say it could,) it would be an anomaly and his tax burden would return to normal. Under the "Fair" Tax, if he spends, oh I don't know, $1 Billion per year, he would pay a tax of about $2.3 Billion over ten years.

So even in the example where he has a year of paying zero taxes, he still pays considerably more over the long haul. Plus, his tax burden is more in line with everyone else's, as a percentage of income.

I'm not saying that there aren't holes in the current system. I'm not saying that there aren't things that should be fixed. I just don't think the "Fair" Tax is the way to fix it.

DavidFL10 said...

If you honestly believe that Bill Gates pays 800 million dollars in taxes every year your understanding of the economy is flawed. Isn't it nice for him that he doesn't have to tell us.

And I didn't use him as an example to show the FT is progressive. I used him as an example to show that when comparing consumption tax to income tax, you cannot assume that the biggest earners in a given year are going to be the biggest spenders or the lowest earners will be the lowest spenders. Which was the fact you misrepresented in your blog to show that the FairTax screws the poor.

You don't think the Waltons spend any of their capital. I do not agree, but will concede the point for this discussion. You said they live off the interest, but what percentage of their reported taxable income do you think the Walton kids spend?

Their money is mostly in completely tax-free municiple bonds. The income they are earning from those bonds is not taxable at all. What isn't in tax free bonds is in traditional stocks and the earnings on it are taxed at 15%. People on that level also regularly create companies and bankrupt them so they can show huge losses to offset the actual earnings. So in reality the difference between the real earnings and the fabricated losses is taxed at a 15% rate.

Using your guessed ratio of reported earnings to spending and comparing 15% income tax to 23% sales tax how do they make out? Don't forget to give them the $196 per month prebate. Grin.

My partner owns a small pond maintenance business. He is the only employee. I do his taxes.
Last year he put about 5K miles on his car--about half of which were actually business miles. For every mile he claimed was business he saved X cents (I think it was about 12 cents/mile but I don't rember exactly). How much of the 5K miles do you think we claimed were for business? There are about a dozen other areas where I was able to fudge the numbers just a bit in his favor to lower the check we had to write to Uncle Sam. If I can fudge as much as I did on a 38K return, I can only imagine how much fudging goes on with a 300K return.

The current system is so rigged against us at the lower end that a complete overhaul is necessary. I don't see how you don't see this.
We progressives should be leading the charge for the FairTax instead of exagerating flaws that pale in comparison to today's system.

Mike H said...

David,

It can be difficult to analyze things like this because we don't always have real numbers to work with. I'm sure that Bill Gates doesn't pay $800 Million per year in taxes. I'm also pretty sure he doesn't spend $1 Billion of his own money, either.

So here's a real-world example with some real numbers. On their 2005 tax return, George Bush "reported adjusted gross income of $735,180 for last year, on which he paid $187,768 in federal taxes."

That means that he paid 25.54% tax (by my math.)

Under the "Fair" Tax, he would have had to spend $816,382.61 in order to pay the same amount of tax. Assuming that he's a little more responsible with his own money than with ours, I'm guessing that he didn't.

The Cheneys reported "about $1.9 million in income on which [they] owed $529,636 in taxes."

Under the "Fair" Tax, they would have had to spend $2.3 Million to pay that much in taxes.

"The current system is so rigged against us at the lower end that a complete overhaul is necessary. I don't see how you don't see this."

I do see that. I agree that the tax system needs to be fixed. I'm just not convinced that the "Fair" Tax is the way to fix it. I will continue to investigate it, especially the use of per-capita expenditure rather than per-capita income. If I come to the realization that the "Fair" Tax is actually fair, I'll be the first to admit I was wrong.

DavidFL10 said...

Mike,

Thank you for keeping an open mind. That is all I can ask.

Notice that the income figure you are citing (the only one we are given) is Bush's ADJUSTED gross. That is the figure that doesn't count tax free bonds or business losses.

I admit I don't think the president of the US could get away with claiming to run a business that went bankrupt--bankrupting the federal coffers has taken too much of his time.

It has been fun chatting with you today.

David

DavidFL10 said...

I have to share one more thing and then I will leave you alone. I started working on my partner's taxes this evening. I noticed angrily that two of the fifteen pond accounts he has are at private residences yet they sent him 1099's in the name of their businesses. That means that the service they pay him for is being written off as a business expense on their respective taxes even though the service in both cases is for their personal residence.
Frankly, I'm not sure why I even wanted to share that with you, but I did.

Mike H said...

David,

Thanks again for all the comments. I just want to reiterate that I'm not defending our current tax system as perfect. I understand that it could use a fair amount of renovation. That being said, there will always be cheats, under any system.

I suspect that your friend's clients who are writing off his service as a business expense would not stop doing so under the "Fair" Tax system. If they have incorporated themselves and allegedly run a business from their homes, I'm sure that some of the goods and services they buy would fall under the business-to-business transaction category, and thus be exempt from federal sales tax.