Congressman Fattah (D-PA) has once again introduced the Debt Free America Act (H.R. 1125) (in the 111th Congress, it was H.R. 4646). This proposal calls for a 1% fee (really a tax) on "every specified transaction." That is any transaction where payment is made by cash, check, credit card, or transfer of stock or other financial instrument. A "transaction" is any retail or wholesale sale, purchase of intermediate goods, and financial and intangible transactions.
There would be a credit for low income individuals based on their adjusted gross income. The individual income tax including the AMT would be repealed after 2021 (the credit would end then as well). The stated goals are to promote economic prosperity and eliminate the debt (as well as interest on it). The text of H.R. 1125 notes that the fee is different from a sales tax and a VAT. The proposal also calls for an 18-member task force to study and make recommendations to address the country's fiscal imbalance.
Congressman Fattah's office asked me for comments on the proposal back in January 2010, which I provided. It doesn't appear that any were incorporated - oh well. I applauded his effort to reduce the debt which I noted doesn't really seem to get much attention; instead, we just keep hearing about tax cuts and more deductions and credits.
Below are the comments I provided in February 2010 on the proposed transaction fee. I believe it needs reform to improve transparency, equity and efficiency. One glaring problem is to repeal the individual income tax but keep the corporate income tax and have businesses pay the transaction fee along with individuals - often on the same transactions (there is a pyramiding problem in the proposal). The text of my earlier comments:
1. Fee versus tax: A fee is generally viewed as something paid for particular services to be received. On the other hand, a tax is something charged that is not tied to services received, but is used to generally fund government operations. Given the use of the transaction fee, it should be called a tax.
2. Base: Transactions to be taxed include retail and wholesale sales, purchases of intermediate goods and financial and intangible transactions. Why not also include services and rent? It seems that payment of a mortgage is a financial transaction, so would be taxed (and the purchase of the home also would have been taxed). It seems that rent should also be taxed as equivalent to a mortgage payment or purchase of an asset. Since it sounds like the goal is to apply the tax to any transaction, it would be inequitable and economically distortive to only apply the tax to transactions involving property and financial transactions and not also services and rents.
3. Digital: Given the varied ways some goods can be transferred today, it would be helpful to clarify that goods refers to both tangible and digital goods.
4. Double taxation: The definition of transactions seems quite broad such that the same funds could be taxed multiple times to the same individual. For example, assume an individual receives a paycheck of $300 and cashes it at a check cashing store. That sounds like a financial transaction upon which the proposed tax applies. When the individual spends the net proceeds at the store, a tax is imposed again. If this is not intended, the definition of transaction should be clarified. If this is the intent, employees might request that they be paid in cash rather than a check (assuming that avoids a transaction tax, and if it does, that seems too easy of a way to avoid the tax).
5. Pyramiding: A problem with most sales taxes as well as gross receipts taxes is that when businesses pay them, all or a portion of that tax is added to the sales price upon which the buyer also pays the tax. This results in a tax on a tax or "pyramiding." The amount of pyramiding can vary from industry to industry and company to company depending on the amount of vertical integration in the company and the complexities of the manufacturing and distribution chains. Because the transaction tax is paid by everyone with no refund to businesses, the tax will pyramid and that should be avoided. One way to avoid that is to only have the transaction tax apply to the final non-business consumer. This is how a credit invoice VAT operates.
6. Tax gap: While the rate is likely to be low because the base is so broad, there is likely to be efforts by some taxpayers to find ways to avoid or evade the tax. Appropriate compliance and penalty provisions are needed to help reduce this reality.
7. Bartering: While application of the tax to bartering transactions is to be studied and a report issued after implementation of the tax, this is likely too late. Under the income tax, bartering transactions are usually subject to tax and people figure out how to value the bartered services. Thus, there seems to be no reason not to stress that the tax applies to bartering transactions from the start.
8. EITC: The EITC is a significant social welfare program administered through the tax law. Its repeal will represent a tax increase for many working individuals who today pay little or no federal income tax, but who would be subject to the transaction tax as well as payroll taxes. Also, since the transaction tax is a regressive tax (while the income tax is progressive), some relief should be provided to low income taxpayers who will likely be burdened by the new tax. In addition, while both the transaction tax and income tax are in place, the proposed §25E credit will not be the equivalent of the EITC even if it is refundable. Consideration could be given to providing payroll tax relief to individuals currently subject to the EITC.
9. AMT repeal: While the AMT for individuals is repealed, there is no mention of whether it is also repealed for estates and trusts. Also, the minimum tax credit (MTC) of §53 appears to remain. Even when (if) the income tax is phased out, something specific should be said about MTCs that some individuals are carrying forward to use against future regular tax liability. The MTC carries forward forever and because it represents a prepayment of regular tax, individuals will expect that they can use it someday. Either it should be terminated or allowed to be used against the transaction tax (although perhaps not able to offset 100% of it in any year). Either way, it should be clear what happens to the MTC carryfoward.
10. Individual versus corporate income tax: Repealing only the individual income tax while apparently maintaining an income tax on corporations, estates and trusts can cause some problems. For example, the tax law will play too large of a role in business form. Small businesses, in particular, will be inclined to avoid the corporate form (unless S corporation status is retained and available to them). Also, individuals will still indirectly pay income tax because the corporate tax is ultimately paid by individuals – employees, investors and customers.
11. Study: Additional items to include in the study along with the EITC, AMT, child tax credit and mortgage interest deduction, include the impact on charitable contributions, fringe benefits and retirement savings planning. The study might also include whether any tax relief should be provided for spending attributable to certain casualty losses.
12. Equity: A transaction tax is regressive in that it will represent a higher percentage of the income of lower income taxpayers relative to higher income taxpayers. Unless it is clear that the proposed transaction tax will apply to deposits and investment growth, it seems that high income taxpayers will have lowered tax liabilities with the transaction tax when it entirely replaces the income tax. While it appears that if a wealthy person were buying and selling investments, the tax would apply to the purchase transactions, what if assets sit and earn interest and dividends that are not spent? Those earnings would have been subject to the income tax (at a rate greater than 1%), but do not appear to be subject to the transaction tax until there is a transaction. Data should be gathered on the distribution of the transaction tax among different income groups. It might be that the income tax should remain for individuals above a certain income level.
13. Effect on states: States tend to rely upon the Internal Revenue Code for the foundation of their income tax. Repeal of the individual income tax at the federal level may pose challenges for many states, perhaps even leading them to also adopt a transaction tax which would increase the amount of regressive taxes imposed upon individuals.
14. VAT: Why not a VAT? The U.S. is the only industrialized country that does not use a VAT. While that is not reason enough to adopt one, a VAT has some advantages over a transaction tax. These include: (1) structured as a credit invoice VAT like other countries use, it would not be a pyramiding tax; (2) the VAT is designed to minimize non-compliance; and (3) it might help the states improve their sales tax structures by converting them to a credit invoice VAT.
For more from Congressman Fattah - here.
Commentary from the Tax Foundation (7/14/11) - here.
What do you think? Is this proposal good as it is? in need of improvement? worth fixing?
Nice job...gotta love tax talk!
ReplyDeleteWhat a shame that HR 1125 hasn't got more support. It's an excellent proposal. For further arguments in favour of replacing ALL taxes by a single flat rate Transaction tax, have a look at http://www.thetransactiontax.org/
ReplyDeleteOr you could read my blog at http://simonthorpesideas.blogspot.com/
Cheers
Simon