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Maxprop wrote:
"Walt" wrote in message With the right exemptions, it can be. Say, a flat X percent with the first Y dollars exempt. By adjusting X and Y one can make it as progressive or regressive as you want. How, then, would that be a "flat tax?" See the work of Hall & Rabushka in the early 80's, the grandfather of all modern "flat tax" proposals. It had a flat 19% tax that applied to corporations and individuals with at $25k deduction for individuals. This sort of scheme is common to all flat tax proposols. In terms of high school analytic geometry, a flat tax is a straight line, but the y-intercept is not necessarily zero. By adjusting the y-intercept, a flat tax can be made more or less progressive. But it's still a flat tax regardless of the intercept. If the y intercept is zero, this is sometimes called a "pure" flat tax, but to insist on this as part of the definition of "flat tax" is to ignore 99% of the actual proposals that call themselves by that name. See http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/publi...cfm?PubID=8521. or http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/shared...sNav=pb&id=151 The flat tax was an interesting proposal. Too bad it was used as a stalking horse. //Walt |
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