changm55
New member
winex said:USCTrojanCPA said:Good point, it would make tax planning less complicated and time consuming.winex said:USCTrojanCPA said:The only bad thing is that it would cost many CPAs/EAs their jobs.winex said:One thing that I wish Romney would have said, and that I hope Ryan will touch upon next Thursday is the impact of tax simplification on the economy. Though I would love for Obama's rumored $5 trillion in tax cuts that Romney plans to be true, what would happen if a combination of lower rates EXACTLY offset by elimination of ALL deductions/loopholes/whatever were to take place and we had a flat tax.
Currently the US economy spends $300 billion a year on tax compliance.
That is an obscene amount of money, and an equally obscene number of hours are spent keeping up with a taxcode that is far too broad for anyone to wrap their arms around. Simplifying taxes has the potential of returning $300 billion to the economy every single year without "costing" the government a cent.
What would the economic impact of something like that be?
Then consider all the misinvestment of resources motivated by taking advantage of a tax code that spans 73,608 pages ( sourcehttp://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2012/04/2012-how-many-pages-are-there-in-us-tax.html)
Tax simplification could be the gift that keeps on giving.
Or it could change the nature of their jobs. Instead of navigating the bureaucracy of our tax system, they could be freed to use the same skills for financial planning.
Thank you. Also think about the impact on the economy of removing dead weight from government off of the backs of people everywhere. Aside from the additional $300 billion (a little Googling shows that number is conservative. Arthur Laffer estimates the burden at over $430 billion annually) that people would be free to spend/invest, there is a multiplier effect from using money towards more productive things.
yeah but the truth is taxes will and always will be subjective... anybody worth their weight in salt probably already has a holdings company somewhere (http://www.investopedia.com/financial-edge/1110/how-big-corporations-avoid-big-tax-bills.aspx)... it is only the ppl that hold w-2's that have no where to hide that will be effected... any attempt to tax holdings company loop holes will require taxing each transaction coming in and out of the country... this will destroy manhattan and along it, the rest of our country especially industries whos system are built on the foundation of easy flow of capital... again the only alternative i can really think of is patching this would be increasing sales tax, luxory tax, VAT tax...
