You might wonder what all the hoopla is over the proposal, in Congress, to impose a national sales tax on everything we purchase.  After all, 45 of our 50 states collect sales taxes.  And 170 different countries collect something similar: a value-added tax, which is assessed on different purchases across the supply chain for manufactured articles and digital services, which is ultimately passed on to the consumer.

The proposal, codified in something called the Fair Tax Act that was introduced in the House of Representatives on January 10, would eliminate all income taxes, payroll taxes and corporate taxes, and incidentally also eliminate the Internal Revenue Service.  It would replace those lost revenues with a tax on every item sold in the U.S., which has variably been reported to be 23% or 30%. 

There are several challenges to implementing a national sales tax.  One of them is the practical aspects of it.  The bill would have each state make the actual collections on sales within their boundaries (including, of course, the five states that do not administer a sales tax), but only provides one quarter of one percent of the collected revenue for the trouble.  Instead of an IRS, you would have 50 states with their own collection bureaucracies.

The political challenge is probably more problematic.  The headlines today are talking about the high cost of goods and services and the overall inflation rate.  Making things more costly for consumers in a highly-visible way—right there on the price tags—might not be a popular idea at this time.  Moreover, the 23% rate that the sponsors are pushing is not entirely accurate.  The proposal would impose a $30 national sales tax on every $100 that you spend, which, if you don’t have a calculator handy, comes to a 30% price increase, and should probably be referred to as a 30% tax.  The 23% figure comes when someone says that $30 is just 23 percent of the $130 amount that the consumer is paying, which seems to be a sly mathematical sleight of hand.

Then, there is the fairness angle.  The sales tax would fall most heavily on people who spend most of their income on goods and services—things like food, transportation, clothing and the roof over their heads.  People with more space between what they earn and what they have to spend on essentials would escape taxation on that ‘discretionary’ income.  The ‘fair tax’ would be a Godsend to wealthier individuals, who could simply stash away a big chunk of their earnings untouched by government hands.  Meanwhile, corporations would escape taxation altogether.

Finally, would the proposed sales tax replace the revenues generated by the various taxes we have on the books today?  Probably not.  A 2004 study from the Tax Policy Center estimated that we would need a national sales tax rate of 60% to generate the current level of tax income collected by the federal government.  So, if the proposal passed, it would lead to tax increases in the future.

The ‘fair tax’ stands very little chance of passing the House of Representatives, never mind the Senate.  Occasionally though, we will see something like this proposal come up every now and again. 

This article was written by an independent writer for Brewster Financial Planning LLC and is not intended as individualized legal or investment advice.