oxlongm wrote:Chet: there's nothing inherent to a flat tax that gets rid of deductions. If we overhauled the tax code completely (whether it was for a flat or a progressive system) we could get rid of all the existing loopholes once... but nothing stops interest groups and lobbyists from adding them back in as soon as Congress reconvenes the following year. I do agree, though, that a simple flat tax would probably result in fewer loopholes (there'd be less political pressure to re-add them).
Also, rich people currently cannot deduct their taxes down to 0%. No matter how many normal deductions they have, the Alternative Minimum Tax (which has a lower rate, but lacks most deductions) hits them on wage income. The main tax dodge used by wealthy people is shifting compensation into stock options, so it's taxed at the lower capital gains rate instead. But getting down to 0%, or anything close to it, would have to involve actual fraud/shady offshore stuff.
Corporations are another story -- they can reduce tax in all sorts of ways, since profit is a much looser concept than income. But I think (and I'd welcome a correction if I'm wrong here) that publicly traded companies can only distribute dividends out of their declared profits, so they can't really weasel out of every dime of profit without pissing off their shareholders.
Good point - I was referring mainly to corporations, but youre right about the Alternative Minimum tax. I also agree with all the lobbyists pushing for more loopholes (exactly the kind of people Paul hates).
You've also hit the nail on the head with stock options. Exactly why Steve Jobs doesnt take a salary and gets paid in perks, so he only has to pay capital gains tax rate.
I would just like to add though that not all stocks are bought just for the dividend payment (think of high growth tech companies).
The taxation on dividends is tricky -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dividend_tax
Also our friend George Bush tried to get rid of the "double tax" -
In 2003, President George W. Bush proposed to eliminate the U.S. dividend tax saying that "double taxation is bad for our economy and falls especially hard on retired people". He also argued that while "it's fair to tax a company's profits, it's not fair to double-tax by taxing the shareholder on the same profits."
Soon after, Congress passed the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, which included some of the cuts Bush requested and which he signed into law on May 28, 2003. Under the new law, dividends are taxed at a 15 percent rate for most individual taxpayers. Dividends received by low income individuals are taxed at a five percent rate until December 31, 2007 and become fully untaxed in 2008. These provisions are set to expire on January 1, 2011.