The Denver Post

Republican tax proposals aren’t as bonkers as they sound

- By Karl W. Smith

Among the many concession­s Kevin Mccarthy agreed to in order to become speaker of the House is one that would give the so- called Fair Tax Act a full hearing on Capitol Hill.

To describe the bill as radical would be an understate­ment. Not only would it abolish the Internal Revenue Service, but it would also replace all existing federal taxes with a flat, nationwide 30% sales tax. That would be on top of existing state and local rates. Sure, the bill probably doesn’t have much chance of passing, but it has some merit and is a good starting point for a discussion about tax reform.

The bill’s handful of supporters — led by Rep. Buddy Carter, a Georgia Republican — hope to spark a more general conversati­on about tax reform. Politicall­y, most everyone outside the group of supporters calls it foolhardy. Legendary low- tax activist Grover Norquist described it as a gift to the Joe Biden administra­tion. In policy terms, though, the underlying idea — a flat tax on consumptio­n — is not as crazy as it sounds.

The fiscal challenges the

U. S. faces over the next decade are stark. Both Democrats and mainstream Republican­s should come to recognize that incorporat­ing a flat tax on consumptio­n into the federal tax system is one of the least painful — both in terms of the burden on working families and the economy as a whole — ways of meeting those challenges. The Center for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget projects that the annual budget deficit could expand to as much as 10% of gross domestic product by 2032. In that scenario, which assumes the Fed remains committed to keeping interest rates high to fight inflation, interest payments alone would account for almost half the deficit.

The prospect of closing that gap through spending cuts alone is bleak. It would require an across- the- board reduction of roughly 25%. If, as is likely, defense and Social Security are shielded from any major reductions, the necessary cuts would rise to 50%. That 50% would apply to Medicare, Medicaid, the subsidies that cap Obamacare premiums and other programs widely regarded as essential.

The reality is that reining in the deficit without increases in revenue is unrealisti­c. The challenge is doing so without curbing economic growth. Research by former President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisors shows that since World War II, increasing taxes by 1% of GDP would lead to a drop of 2% to 3% in economic output. Given the U. S.’ s $ 31 trillion debt load, that type of slowdown would exacerbate the challenge in shrinking the deficit by raising interest payments as a percentage of GDP.

Economists have long known that flat consumptio­n taxes are less damaging to economic growth than the current system. More recent research suggests that this advantage grows exponentia­lly as tax rates rise. The reason the Fair Tax Act isn’t a realistic way of implementi­ng a flat consumptio­n tax is that, like any sales tax, it places the entire burden of tax collection on retailers. This can work as long as tax rates are low, but once they start to climb into the double digits, selling goods and services “off the books” at a discount becomes so profitable that honest retailers could find themselves run of business.

To solve this problem, most countries have turned to a value- added tax, or VAT. Like the sales tax, the VAT is a tax on consumptio­n rather than income, but it’s collected at various steps throughout the supplychai­n process based on how much each step adds to a product’s value rather than collected all at once at the end. Sweden

“Democrats have opposed flat taxes since Steve Forbes brought the idea into mainstream debate during his 1996 presidenti­al campaign. The core of their objection is that more of the burden falls on middle- and lower- income households relative to a progressiv­e tax.”

pioneered its use in the 1960s to cover the rising cost of its expansive social welfare systems.

In the European Union, the average VAT rate is 21%. Unlike sales tax in the U. S., VAT rates are traditiona­lly calculated inclusive of the tax itself. Had the authors of the Fair Tax Act structured their proposal as a VAT, the inclusivel­y calculated rate would have been

23%. When you consider that EU countries levy both income and payroll taxes on top of the VAT, the Fair Tax Act, which would replace income and payroll taxes, seems like a bargain.

Yet the bill’s supporters deliberate­ly decided to propose a sales tax despite its infeasibil­ity because the VAT is associated with the high- tax countries of western Europe, potentiall­y creating a public- relations nightmare and triggering severe backlash among constituen­ts. But these countries turned to a VAT with the same goal that motivates Fair Tax Act proponents today: Raise a lot of revenue with minimum impact on job growth and investment. The difference is that European countries needed the revenue to cover higher spending, while Fair Tax Act proponents are looking to get rid of the IRS. In either case, the most efficient way to raise revenue while preserving economic growth is a flat tax on consumptio­n.

Democrats have opposed flat taxes since Steve Forbes brought the idea into mainstream debate during his 1996 presidenti­al campaign. The core of their objection is that more of the burden falls on middle- and lower- income households relative to a progressiv­e tax. Taxing consumptio­n, rather than income, exacerbate­s this effect because, in general, wealthier families are likely to save a larger portion of their paycheck. This opposition ignores the potential for flat taxes to generate the revenue necessary to fund progressiv­e priorities without sacrificin­g growth. That’s precisely what pushed western European countries toward the VAT.

The closest thing the U. S. has to a flat tax on consumptio­n is the Medicare payroll tax, which is paid by both employees and employers. In 2021, the tax raised a little over $ 400 billion, or about 20% of the $ 2 trillion brought in by federal income taxes. The combined rate, including employers and employees, of the Medicare payroll tax was only 2.9%. Individual income tax rate brackets, on the other hand, ranged from 10% to 37%.

The revenue- raising power of a flat tax is so strong that Emmanuel Saez, an economics professor with the University of California at Berkeley and one of the economists who popularize­d the wealth tax, backed a form of the flat tax as part of his ideal reform proposal in his critique of the U. S. tax system. Saez would tax personal income rather than consumptio­n.

Mainstream Republican­s have been more open to flat taxes, and they shouldn’t be scared away now by the radical proposals of Fair Tax supporters or the surprising support flat taxes receive from left- leaning economists. Indeed, given that Republican enthusiasm for outright cuts to entitlemen­ts have waned, the need for a flat tax is greater than it has been at any time since World War II. Even if Democrats insist on something closer to the Saez model, Republican­s should eagerly support it.

The deficit is not going away, and the spending cuts needed to balance the budget are enormous while enthusiasm for such cuts is tepid at best. Accepting that revenues have to increase but demanding that we use the most economical­ly efficient tax possible is the only way to prevent wildly inefficien­t taxes to be rushed through once a crisis strikes.

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