Why a flat tax?
The primary reason is simplicity. Again, as linked several times, the present system requires
six billion man hours of work per year.
Me personally, I'm advocating it because it would reduce the "net workload" of the country. Others have had other reasons. For example, eliminating the apparently 20 hours that the "average" person spends every year doing their taxes. Or the, from the link, the over $200/yr that the "average" person spends paying tax preparers to handle it for them.
It's altogether a bloated and bad system.
Why not a progressie tax that is a value of a function e.g. ((y-10000)*2/1000)
where y is your income and the result is the percentage
(this function may suck, its an example)
...well, your specific example...if I'm interpreting it correctly, anyone with an income of $60,000/yr or more would pay
100% tax. So...yeah, I think I'd want to look at a different example.
If you would like to propose something with an inverse parabolic curve, I think that could work. I might question why you apparently want people who make more money to pay a higher rate, but I acknowledge that we already do and either way, it's probably not very relevant to the current discussion.
if you just tax monetery income, then it disproportionately affects the poor
(rich people tend to trade in assets/stocks etc, not money) and would be easy to circumvent.
I'm not very interested in engaging this "RICH PEOPLE ARE BAD!!!!" thing that bay12 has going on.
Honestly, if you want to specifically discuss taxes, I would propose we eliminate income tax altogether. Income taxes have only been around since
1913, and this idea of withholding from wages has only been around since
1943. Income tax was supposed to be a temporary measure to fund war, but somehow it's become something everyone just accepts as how things are done. Income tax at all is actually a fairly good example of what I'm talking about regarding inefficiency.
So, yeah...I'm in favor of eliminating it. This country got along just fine for nearly 150 years without it, but now that we have it, we have all the bloat that comes with it and it would be somewhat difficult to eliminate. It would be more complicated than simply cutting it off. As a
practical matter, simplifying and increasing efficiency over time is more realistic.
So...all that said, if you have some specific model to consider, *shrug* ok, that's fine. My goal here is to reduce waste and unnecessary work. I'm willing to consider other methods that accomplish that. But I question why you apparently find the previously described flat tax undesireble.
Does anyone have a good reason to not use the flat tax system described above proposed to Congress in the 90s?
Also, the infastructure used in cities for water and sewage is quite efficient, it requires fairly little work versus the ammount of people it services. Once you build the infastructure, it needs very little matenance.
I've given lots of links supporting my position. You're making blind assertions. I'm going to favor the
links that support my position over your simply stating otherwise with no corroboration.
Like these:
San Antonio Agrees to $1.1 Billion Upgrade Sewer SystemsExpansion of County Sewer System Could Hit $3 BillionRepair bill over $1 billion to fix crumbling Miami-Dade water, sewage systemI think sewer systems are not cheap and easy to maintain as you claim.