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Modeling Assignment: The Fair Tax Group A Jeff Benne Maurice Hughes Rachel Johnston Samantha Selz Mark Thornhill * * Modeling Assignment Our assignment is to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Modeling Assignment: The


1
Modeling AssignmentThe Fair Tax
  • Group A
  • Jeff Benne
  • Maurice Hughes
  • Rachel Johnston
  • Samantha Selz
  • Mark Thornhill

2
Modeling Assignment
  • Our assignment is to examine some decision that
    is current in the local business or political
    community, and identify models that are being
    used to examine the question, as well as those
    models which should be used to examine the
    question.

3
Topic The Fair Tax
  • We are considering the adoption of the so-called
    Fair Tax, also known as the National Sales Tax.
    The Fair Tax is one of the key policy proposals
    of Republican presidential candidate Mike
    Huckabee.
  • According to fairtax.org, The Fair Tax has these
    key principles
  • A progressive national retail sales tax
  • A prebate to ensure that no American pays
    federal taxes on spending up to the poverty level
  • Dollar-for-dollar federal revenue neutrality
  • Through companion legislation, the repeal of the
    16th Amendment.

4
What is the Fair Tax?
  • A Progressive national retail sales tax
  • The proposal is for a 23 national sales tax to
    replace federal income and payroll taxes,
    including personal, gift, estate, capital gains,
    alternative minimum, Social Security/Medicare,
    self-employment, and corporate taxes.
  • This tax rate is 23 of the tax-inclusive sales
    price, which is an important distinction. For
    example, under this proposal an item selling for
    100 would have 23 in taxes included in that
    price, meaning that the pre-tax price is 77.
  • You can see that in order to get that 23 in
    taxes, the actual tax rate is almost 30 (23/
    77 .298, or 29.8).
  • This is one of the key arguments of opponents of
    the tax that the 23 figure is misleading, given
    the way we are used to viewing sales taxes.
  • (This example is from factcheck.org)

5
The Prebate
  • The prebate is a prepaid, monthly rebate for
    every registered household to cover the
    consumption tax spent on necessities up to the
    federal poverty level. This would be about
    27,000 per year.
  • According to proponents, this is how the FairTax
    completely untaxes the poor, lowers the tax
    burden on most, while making the overall rate
    progressive. They say that the FairTax is
    progressive based on lifestyle/spending choices,
    rather than simply punishing those taxpayers who
    are successful.
  • The Treasury Department estimates the total
    annual spending for prebates could be as high as
    700 billion annually, making it the largest
    category of federal spending. Fair Taxation says
    that the total would be closer to 485 billion.

6
Other Principles
  • Dollar-for-dollar federal revenue neutrality
  • Fair Tax proponents say that the plan is
    revenue-neutral, meaning the amount of taxes paid
    to the government in total would remain the same.
    However, noted tax analyst William G. Gale says
    that if the tax rate were set at 23 percent
    (tax-inclusive), the revenue loss would exceed 7
    trillion over the next decade relative to current
    law.
  • Repeal of the 16th Amendment
  • This is the constitutional amendment, passed in
    1913, that established the Federal Income Tax
  • The Congress shall have power to lay and collect
    taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived,
    without apportionment among the several states,
    and without regard to any census or enumeration.
  • Repeal would have to come through a
    constitutional amendment.

7
Who are the decision makers?
  • The decision maker could be the voter deciding
    whether to vote for a candidate supporting the
    Fair Tax. However, since there are many other
    factors in a voters decision whether or not to
    vote for a candidate, for this assignment we will
    consider this issue from the perspective of a
    member of Congress considering whether to vote
    for the Fair Tax Bill, or not.

8
What options are they considering?
  • ? Vote for the Fair Tax Bill, or
  • ? Vote against it.

9
What kinds of information are necessary to
determine the benefits of the options under
consideration?
  • Estimated Monetary Impacts
  • Costs to implement the new program
  • Annual cost to administer
  • Annual cost to administer current system
  • Effect on tax revenue
  • Effect on taxes paid by the public (particularly
    constituents likely to vote)
  • Effect on the overall economy (particularly
    constituents likely to vote)

10
What kinds of information are necessary
(continued)
  • Opinions
  • The public (particularly constituents)
  • Special interest groups
  • Key individuals (donors)
  • Courts (constitutionality)
  • The party line
  • Likelihood of passage

11
What model is being used now?
  • Congresspersons currently rely on
  • Polls
  • Special interest groups / lobbyists
  • Party leaders
  • Media
  • Personal bias

12
What kinds of models are necessary to examine
that information?
  • Descriptive models would be required to show
  • Public opinion
  • Constitutionality
  • Support or opposition by special interest groups
    and key individuals
  • Likelihood of the bills passage
  • Party line

13
What kinds of models(continued)?
  • Predictive models would be required for
  • Costs of implementing the proposal
  • Costs of administrating
  • Effect on tax revenue
  • Effect on taxes paid by the public
  • Effect on the overall economy

14
What kinds of models(continued)?
  • Decision models pull together results of the
    other models in ways that allow the decision
    maker to make an informed decision.
  • Show key correlations
  • Allow weighting of inputs
  • Adjust for bias
  • Relative priorities
  • Allow flexible combinations of input data

15
Result of Modeling
  • The final model would include graphical displays
    of the overall monetary effect of enactment of
    the proposal.
  • Compare current system to proposed
  • Results could be disaggregated into components
  • Costs to administer
  • IRS, other enforcement
  • State revenue agencies
  • Tax accountants
  • Tax revenue
  • Effect on constituents
  • By income class, other demographics

16
What kinds of problems in data collection and/or
analysis are likely?
  • Costs and effects are difficult to estimate. For
    example, one key factor is the impact on spending
    and saving among the general public. How
    accurately can this be predicted? The challenge
    is to find estimates that are well-researched and
    unbiased. Much of the data available to the
    general public is published from a perspective of
    being for the tax or against it.
  • Complexity of the analysis. It is important to
    have access to accurate, unbiased summary data,
    with the capability to drill-down to relevant
    lower levels.
  • Several of the factors are based on opinions,
    thus polls must be conducted if they are not
    already available. It is important to show not
    only the latest poll information, but the trends
    of polls wherever possible. Sampling must be
    large enough to be statistically significant.

17
How would you address those needs in a DSS?
  • Bias in data can be addressed gathering enough
    data to overcome the bias. Also can be overcome
    by alerting the user to potential bias, and
    allowing the weighting of data to account for the
    degree of confidence.
  • Complex data will require a fairly powerful
    database capable of holding low-level
    disaggregated data, with the capability of
    aggregating up to the initial summary level. The
    user should be able to control the summary levels
    through an intuitive interface. The summary
    levels should match across the various data for
    example, by state and congressional district.
  • Polls should show trends over time in a graphic
    format. The user should be able to drill into
    the poll data for various demographic factors,
    particularly congressional district.
  • Overall Goal Turn data into information
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