‘Fair’ sales tax plan would hurt you and help the rich
House Republicans rolled out a tax proposal that replaces the current income tax system with a national sales tax. There are serious concerns with the Republican tax proposal as it will greatly increase the tax burden on those who can least afford it.
H.R. 25, the Fair Tax Act, is anything but fair.
It will impose a 30% tax on all goods and services nationwide, abolish all other federal taxes and eliminate the progressive aspects of the tax system.
While this may sound appealing to some, this tax will add 30% to necessities like groceries, rent, health care and more – on top of state taxes. Items like milk and eggs will be taxed at the same rate as sports cars and other luxury items.
Under the current progressive income tax system, someone with a lower income pays a smaller percentage of their earnings in taxes than those with higher incomes.
The Fair Tax would eliminate this progressive system and impose a flat sales tax rate, meaning someone who makes $45,000 would pay the same on all goods and services as someone who makes $1 million a year.
To be clear: the Fair Tax is a regressive tax.
It takes a larger percentage of lowand middle-class families’ money and allows the wealthy to keep more. It eliminates the credits and deductions given by our current system, and instead, offers a meager coupon, or prebate, to attempt to offset the negative impacts on working people.
All told, the Fair Tax will force lowerbudget households to choose between lifesaving medicine or groceries, but for wealthy families, it’s a savings opportunity.
This plan will have a devastating impact on Arizonans.
Those with lower budgets or fixed-incomes, who are already struggling to make ends meet, will be hit the hardest. Families will pay more to keep the lights on and food on the table.
The “Fair Tax” was considered by the George W. Bush administration, which commissioned a study that found people making between $15,000 and $200,000 a year would see their taxes increase under the plan, while people making more than $200,000 a year would see more than a 7% decrease.
In Arizona, the median household income is $65,913. With most Arizonans just trying to get by, this Republican tax plan is regressive, radical and out-oftouch with the people who live here.
While the cost of living continues to rise, Republicans aren’t focused on making life more affordable.
Instead, they’re determined to give tax breaks to the wealthy, shift the tax burden to the middle class and increase the deficit. They continue to threaten a government default that will force our nation into a recession if we don’t make cuts to vital programs like Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
And we are seeing, once again, House Republicans repeating history with continued fiscal irresponsibility while in power.
In 2017, during the Trump administration, Republicans passed their same old trickle-down economics tax agenda, which will add a startling $1.9 trillion to our debt by 2028 to give a tax cut to the very wealthy and corporations.
With Republicans back in charge of the House, the very first piece of legislation they passed was to eliminate IRS funding to crack down on wealthy tax cheats, adding $114 billion to the deficit.
Economist William Gale of the Brookings Institution – who ran the numbers in 2005 on Bush’s national tax plan and found that the Fair Tax would increase the deficit by $10.6 trillion over 10 years – and to avoid increasing the deficit, the Fair Tax would have to be set at more than 64%.
Republicans brand themselves as fiscally responsible, and yet, each time they’re voted into office, they’re fiscally reckless.
As House Democrats, we are fighting for a fairer tax code that will make wealthy individuals and corporations pay their fair share while giving tax relief and lowering costs for Americans.
Congressional Democrats authorized an enhanced child tax credit in the American Rescue Plan that put money back in the pockets of working families and helped 92% of Arizona families with children.
Instead of helping to reauthorize this critical tax credit, Republicans are seeking to impose a burdensome and punitive tax code that favors the few.
It’s time Republicans stopped working to give tax breaks to the wealthy and worked across the aisle to find ways to make our current tax system fairer for working people and more equitable for all Americans.