HemlockGrey wrote:Is the idea any good? I was getting a good chuckle out of the insane rantings of professional idiot John Hawkwins when I came across this support of a flat tax:
1) Tax rates would tend to stay low because politicians would make everyone angry by raising them.
2) There would be more motivation for people to work hard and be entrepreneurs since they wouldn't be penalized for earning more money. That would lead to significantly increased economic growth.
3) It would make it much simpler and easier to prepare taxes under flat tax.
Those reasons sound a mite...sketchy, if you will, but I've heard flat taxes bandied about before by at least semi-rational people, and I'd like to hear what the informed and esteemed members of this board have to say (yes, all three of them

).
A flat tax
is a good idea. Dismissing Hawkins as "insane" and a "professional idiot" may be easy, but it does nothing to refute his arguments.
To begin with, tax rates probably would tend to stay low, because a tax hike would reaise taxes across the board, and would be almost guaranteed to be unpopular. It's much easier to approve a tax hike that takes money out of someone else's pocket than it is it to approve one that takes it out of your own.
In the second place, he's right about people being penalized for earning money. As much as it may appeal to people to see the richest in society paying the heaviest tax share, that is not
entirely beneficial. When you have the largest tax burdens on the highest earners, it
does look like a penalty for financial success. And the fact is, that under the current scheme of things, rich people put a lot of their money in tax-free securities, and other tax shelters, rather than in something that will increase economic activity and create jobs. When Reagan cut taxes in the 80s, or when Kennedy cut them in the '60s, not only did the federal government collect more tax revenue than ever; people in upper income brackets paid a larger amount of taxes than before. They even paid a higher
share of all taxes than before. This sounds paradoxical, but there's a good reason for it. When lower tax rates went into effect, it paid to take money out of tax shelters and put it into ventures and investments where it was more productive, both for individual investors and for the economy as a whole. The result of this was an expansion of the economy, and incomes and employment rose. Consequently, tax revenues rose, despite lower rates being charged for a given income. The incomes of people in the higher brackets went up disproportionately, so the total taxes they paid also went up disproportionately - even though they were paying lower tax rates. But regardless of why, the fact is: tax
rates went down, but tax
revenues went up. (Unfortunately,
spending went up even more, but that's another issue.)
And in the third place, I can't see how you can possibly argue with his last point. The current tax code is complex enough that many people have to hire full time accountants to keep their taxes straight. A flat tax would make taxes far simpler.