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Making tax sense : the case for a progressive consumed-income tax / M. Kevin McGee.

Ebook Central Academic Complete Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
McGee, M. Kevin, 1958- author.
Contributor:
Bloomsbury (Firm), publisher.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Income tax--United States.
Income tax.
Tax expenditures--United States.
Tax expenditures.
Taxation--United States.
Taxation.
United States.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (175 pages)
Distribution:
New York : Bloomsbury Publishing (US), 2025.
Place of Publication:
Lanham, Maryland : Lexington Books, [2019]
Summary:
Our tax system is a mess. And the reason for that mess is, our tax system is incoherent. A well-designed tax system is like a good jigsaw puzzle: all the pieces fit together snugly, so when the whole thing is fully assembled, it forms a coherent picture. But our current tax system is disjointed, with parts that don't logically fit together. That results in inconsistencies, complexity, loopholes, and distorted incentives. We need a tax system that make sense. As this book shows however, making a traditional income tax coherent is an impossible goal. But coherence is achievable if we adjust our target, and complete the switch to a consumed-income tax -- a system that taxes all income, not when it is earned, but when that income is consumed. The move towards a consumed-income tax was begun decades ago, when we first adopted IRAs and other tax-deferred savings accounts. We just needed to complete the evolution. The book explores a variety of tax issues -- among them savings, small businesses, owner-occupied houses, and corporations -- and develops seven groups of recommended changes. These changes would result in a tax system that would be pro-growth, by eliminating the existing disincentives to saving and investment. But the tax system would also remain progressive, with the wealthy taxed as much as and perhaps even more than currently. That combination could make the recommended changes attractive to members of both parties, and might bring to a close the political seesaw in tax policy that we've experienced over that last several decades.
Contents:
The problem
The impossibility of a coherent traditional income tax
The logic of consumption-timed taxes
The vat, flat, and all that
Savings & borrowing under a consumed-income tax
The tax treatment of owner occupied housing
Transition issues
The tax treatment of small businesses
Inheritances, bequests, and the estate tax
Insurance
The corporate income tax
Tax expenditures
The Trump tax cut
Summary: the needed tax changes
Is reform attainable?
Conclusion
Bibliography
About the author.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
1-66699-787-0
1-4985-8718-6
OCLC:
1081336678

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