Posted by bad_luck on 11/16/2018 1:05:00 PM (view original):
Posted by cccp1014 on 11/16/2018 1:01:00 PM (view original):
Posted by bad_luck on 11/16/2018 12:03:00 PM (view original):
Posted by cccp1014 on 11/16/2018 10:13:00 AM (view original):
Everything you currently pay state tax for you'd pay a 9% federal tax.
So state sales taxes just go away? Or are we stacking?
We are stacking. Life becomes more expensive but you're effective tax rate goes down to 9% so you may save more. Less beurocracy with complex tax codes and evaders. So your friends who are worth $200mil but pay little when they buy new furniture worth $2mil they pay $180k in federal taxes on it.
A married couple with 2 kids and a household income of $100,000 pays an effective rate of 5% in 2018.
So this plan almost DOUBLES their income taxes and also adds 9% to a lot of things they buy.
Seems like a terrible idea.
By contrast, our second example involves a married couple with two children and total household income of $100,000. Again, this family takes the standard deduction, and all of its income comes from wages and salaries.
For this taxpayer, the standard deduction is double what singles get, at $12,700. The family of four gets four personal exemptions at $4,050 per exemption, which provides another $16,200 in reductions. That brings taxable income down to $71,100. That amount keeps this taxpayer near the upper end of the 15% bracket, and the resulting tax is $9,732.50. Moreover, if the two kids qualify for the child tax credit, then an additional $2,000 in tax savings brings the net down to $7,732.50, or less than 8% of their income as an effective tax rate.
Your delta is not that much 9% vs. 8%. I am trying to shift the taxation burden from production to consumption. Maybe those that earn less would get a higher child tax credit and when they file at year end get a bigger refund or maybe they will be more frugal and not get iPhones and Air Jordans for their kids.