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FICA tax proposal:
FICA is the most regressive federal tax. It’s particularly a burden upon the working poor and their dependents.
It’s proposed half of the payroll’s 12.4 earmarked for Social Security, and the entire 2.9% earmarked for Medicare to be revenue neutrally transformed from the FICA payroll tax to an effectively 4.55% general sales tax earmarked for the same purposes.
This proposal would not increase net taxes upon the working poor and their dependents but due to the greater base of taxes upon USA’s general sales rather than upon payrolls, it increases federal revenues available for Social Security and Medicare. It would effectively reduce the net aggregate taxes levied upon employers, (i.e. it’s effectively a reduction of taxes upon enterprises); it effectively increases the net taxes levied upon all individual’s incomes not subject to FICA payroll taxes.
(Spending, rather than what’s reported on income tax forms, more accurately reflect comparative net incomes and/or wealth among the spenders).
If some of the economic and social benefits due to this proposal are not passed on by states to their unemployed recipients of their state’s funded public assistances, this proposal would be somewhat detrimental to those recipients.
Respectfully Supposn
FICA tax proposal:
FICA is the most regressive federal tax. It’s particularly a burden upon the working poor and their dependents.
It’s proposed half of the payroll’s 12.4 earmarked for Social Security, and the entire 2.9% earmarked for Medicare to be revenue neutrally transformed from the FICA payroll tax to an effectively 4.55% general sales tax earmarked for the same purposes.
This proposal would not increase net taxes upon the working poor and their dependents but due to the greater base of taxes upon USA’s general sales rather than upon payrolls, it increases federal revenues available for Social Security and Medicare. It would effectively reduce the net aggregate taxes levied upon employers, (i.e. it’s effectively a reduction of taxes upon enterprises); it effectively increases the net taxes levied upon all individual’s incomes not subject to FICA payroll taxes.
(Spending, rather than what’s reported on income tax forms, more accurately reflect comparative net incomes and/or wealth among the spenders).
If some of the economic and social benefits due to this proposal are not passed on by states to their unemployed recipients of their state’s funded public assistances, this proposal would be somewhat detrimental to those recipients.
Respectfully Supposn
It would also be detrimental to those receiving social security retirement and disability benefits. The idea of social security was to tax current workers and their employers to (help) fund current retirees and the disabled. Depending on what is not exempt from your new national sales tax it could end up being even more regressive.
It, [i.e. a federal sales tax] would also be detrimental to those receiving social security retirement and disability benefits. The idea of social security was to tax current workers and their employers to (help) fund current retirees and the disabled. Depending on what is not exempt from your new national sales tax it could end up being even more regressive.
I'm concerned by concentration of wealth at levels which cannot sustain a healthy middle class. How should a disillusioned majority group of impoverished people react when the tax code forces them to work longer hours to afford the traditional lifestyle? The same level of taxation could be a boon if only people who need benefit from public services received the necessary level of accommodation. It makes more sense for spending to address social deficits than to continue down the failed path of supply side economics.
Ttwtt78640, a general sales tax is not detrimental to those that derive their incomes from sources less “fixed”; (i.e. they do not particularly detrimental to incomes derived from current employment or investments that subject to risks and profits). Social Security benefits are annually monitored and pegged to a cost-price index and retain their purchasing powers.
I’m a proponent of the federal minimum wage being similarly pegged to retain its purchasing power. The minimum wage rate is not among the primary causes of U.S. dollar’s inflation but it’s certainly a victim of that inflation.
Respectfully, Supposn
it effectively increases the net taxes levied upon all individual’s incomes not subject to FICA payroll taxes
... That clearly includes retirees.
The federal MW applies to less than 4% of workers, while the retired account for over 14% of the population. I too favor indexining the federal MW to the CPI. One must also remember that the "safety net" provides tax free benefits to many of the working poor - that portion of the population (about 25%?) would also be subject to your additional sales tax - greatly reducing their, already limited, current purchasing power.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...-working-class-whites/?utm_term=.36b369be6f26
FICA tax proposal:
FICA is the most regressive federal tax. It’s particularly a burden upon the working poor and their dependents.
It’s proposed half of the payroll’s 12.4 earmarked for Social Security, and the entire 2.9% earmarked for Medicare to be revenue neutrally transformed from the FICA payroll tax to an effectively 4.55% general sales tax earmarked for the same purposes.
This proposal would not increase net taxes upon the working poor and their dependents but due to the greater base of taxes upon USA’s general sales rather than upon payrolls, it increases federal revenues available for Social Security and Medicare. It would effectively reduce the net aggregate taxes levied upon employers, (i.e. it’s effectively a reduction of taxes upon enterprises); it effectively increases the net taxes levied upon all individual’s incomes not subject to FICA payroll taxes.
(Spending, rather than what’s reported on income tax forms, more accurately reflect comparative net incomes and/or wealth among the spenders).
If some of the economic and social benefits due to this proposal are not passed on by states to their unemployed recipients of their state’s funded public assistances, this proposal would be somewhat detrimental to those recipients.
Respectfully Supposn
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