Although proposals for "flat" taxes have received a good deal of attention, a majority of Americans say that, for reasons of fairness, they favor a progressive tax. The USA Tax: A Progressive Consumption Tax presents an alternative to both the present tax system and a flat tax. The USA (unlimited savings allowance) tax is a progressive consumption tax that differs fundamentally from our current tax structure in that it taxes consumption rather than income. In April 1995, the USA tax bill was introduced into the United States Senate. Whatever the fate of the bill, this book is an important contribution to the literature on the theory and design of a progressive consumption tax. The USA tax has two components—the household tax, which replaces the current household income tax, and the business tax, which replaces the corporate income tax. A fundamental purpose of the USA tax is to raise the level of national saving and investment. It accomplishes this by making all household saving and business investment in capital goods tax-deductible. Seidman describes the ideals on which the USA tax is founded: the household component is based on the progressive personal consumption tax, and the business component is based on the consumption-type value-added tax (VAT). He then shows how the version of the USA household tax presented in the 1995 bill differs in critical aspects from the ideal of a personal consumption tax, and how it can be improved by amendments. Seidman devotes most of his book to the impact on saving, the issue of fairness, practical design options, simplification, and a variety of questions and criticisms. The book, written in straightforward language, will help guide the non-economist through the coming debates on the USA tax.
Public Members : James H. Billington , Librarian of Congress ; John W. Carlin , Archivist of the United States ; Bruce ... Philip M. Condit , Denton A. Cooley , Gray Davis , Arturo Diaz , William H. Draper III , David Efron , Dianne ...
William Ellery to Nicholas Cooke,Nov.30,1777,LDC, 8: 326; JCC, Nov.2,1781, 21: 1089–90,April 1,1782,22: 159,Sept.10,1782,23: 565–71. 30.Morris was widely known as the “Financier.”Most historians now accept the generally favorable ...
While the essays cover topics ranging from federal housing policy to environmental clean-up costs to tax treaty policymaking, the book is held together by a philosophy as simple as it is radical.
In this third edition, Brownlee adds four new chapters covering the colonial era, the American Revolution, the Civil War, the 1920s, and the post-1945 era including the tax policies of the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations.