Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2010
The flat tax replacement for the current federal income tax—proposed by Hall and Rabushka, and endorsed by House Majority Leader Dick Armey and Senator and Presidential aspirant Arlen Specter—has attracted support from scholars and the general public alike. Many scholars believe the flat tax will reduce the inefficiencies of the income tax, increase incentives for productive behavior, and promote savings. Proponents add that the flat tax will produce adequate revenue without significantly increasing the tax burden that the personal and corporate income taxes currently impose.
For the general public, the most salient attraction of the flat tax lies in its promise of simplicity. The voluminous Internal Revenue Code would follow the dinosaurs into extinction, replaced by a short and easily comprehended statute. Transactions motivated by tax reduction likewise would disappear, as would the complex forms of certain business transactions. Most particularly, the prospect of filing the annual income tax return on a form the size of a postcard has captured the popular imagination.
The flat tax converts the income tax into a national tax on consumption, whose economic effects resemble those of a value-added tax. It consists of two parts, a tax on individuals and a tax on businesses. The two taxes, taken together, create an “airtight” system for including income in the tax base once and only once, as close to the source as possible. The rate is the same for both taxes.
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