Quote:
Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
Thank you for your attention.
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In view of the obvious fact that you have offered none in return, it's nice of you to thank others for their attention. You haven't even made the most rudimentary attempt to understand this issue, and you clearly failed to understand
anything I posted. There was nothing but ignorant prattle sandwiched in between your insults.
First of all, you
still will not admit that the FairTax is a
regressive tax.
Quote:
Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
It's actually a fairly progressive tax, if you read about it.
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Well, I
have read about it, professor, and it's
quite regressive. Earlier I mentioned the concepts of "marginal propensity to consume" and "average propensity to consume." (MPC and APC.) It's clear that you are completely ignorant of these concepts, or the FairTax's regressivity would be quite obvious to you. But if you had taken any college courses in economics, you would no doubt have seen all those graphs showing the lines and curves depicting income, APC, and MPC in bright colors. Ring a bell somewhere?
But it looks like I might need to explain this to you in 4th-grade-style terms that even the most ignorant simpleton could not possibly fail to grasp: As a household's income rises, the percentage of it devoted to consumption begins to fall, and it tends to keep falling as income rises to higher and higher levels. Got it?
So you can easily see that as a household income rises within the distribution, its marginal and effective tax rates would steadily
decline under the FairTax. That's the generally accepted definition of a regressive tax.
These are elementary concepts that have been taught to freshman-level students for generations. That you obviously are quite ignorant of them, yet claim to have taught economics at the university level, is simply astonishing. In fact, you should consider it deeply embarrassing. You don't have the knowledge base to even
pass a university level economic course, let alone
teach one.
But speaking of ignorance, there's more!
Check this exchange (your interjected mid-sentence comment in red):
There are fair points to be made about what we call "tax incidence"
I'm assuming you mean "incidents" since you are SO smart, compared to me. [sarcasm] concerning the corporate income tax.
That little jewel just backfired on you, professor.
Apparently you thought you were getting in a clever little dig, mocking what you obviously thought was a nonsensical statement concerning "tax incidents." In fact, it appears obvious that you thought I meant to type the word
incidents.
But I did not. I was referring to
tax incidence, yet another concept of which you are obviously quite ignorant. If you have never even heard of tax incidence, you know nothing about corporate taxation in the U.S., and are completely ignorant of the theoretical debate over just exactly who bears the burden of corporate taxation. Thus it is not surprising that you have no understanding of the "embedded taxes" issue, and blindly buy into the B.S. that the imposition of the 30% FairTax on final sales would somehow be canceled out by the elimination of "embedded taxes." This is patent nonsense designed to appeal to people who fail to engage in critical thinking and suffer from severe cases of innumeracy. In that regard, it's somewhat like many of the claims made a few years ago by supporters of the new health care plan. Free lunch, anyone?
If you want to learn just a little bit about corporate "tax incidence," you can start here:
http://ntj.tax.org/wwtax/ntjrec.nsf/...7_Gravelle.pdf
Can you see why I don't believe for a minute that you've ever taught economics at the university level?
As regards matters concerning economics and taxation, you are clearly an uneducated and quite ignorant individual. I always figured that you're just another ignoramus with a penchant for shooting off your mouth and hurling insults at anyone who dares to challenge any of your drivel, or any of the crap proffered by the fringe websites to which you sometimes link.
But when I read that you claimed to have actually taught economics at the university level, I realized that you're far more of an embarrassment than I had previously thought.