Rand's WSJ Op-Ed: Blow Up the Tax Code and Start Over

How to be like Rand Paul:
  1. Kick ass
  2. Take names later
Actually, Rand won't kick your ass unless you try to kick his. He won't take your name either. Unless, he has a warrant.

this plan would seriously change my life. Just as an ordinary person doing what I do, having never been involved in politics. The way I am self employed; my burdens to market entry would just fall away. I can just see the richer soil.
I'm thinking of all the years I've worked and the thousands I could have saved and invested. Perhaps, I would have started my own business buy now. Make it so Rand.

Anyone know where I can find the complete plan?
Ditto. I want the details. Although, I'm sure he is trying to brand himself and the plan before people get caught up in details and pick it apart. Smart.
 
Not sure why I noticed this, but in Rand's tax video, the kid/laptop clip at 0:19 and of the flag at 1:12 are the same clips from this 2012 Gingrich ad at 0:44 and 0:04, respectively

 
Not sure why I noticed this, but in Rand's tax video, the kid/laptop clip at 0:19 and of the flag at 1:12 are the same clips from this 2012 Gingrich ad at 0:44 and 0:04, respectively



Welcome to multimedia and professional ad production. :)
 
No and yes. Lately it has not been at the user end. Otherwise it would happen on other forums. Which it doesn't.

The freezing is on the RPF side. The multiple posts is on the user side when you try resubmitting or refreshing the page in the middle of said freeze :-P
 
I want to see someone actually blow up 70,000 pages of tax code.

C'mon, youtubers!

A box of copy paper is 5k sheets (10 reams @ 500 sheets/ream), so 14 boxes for 70k pages. Easy-peasy.
That would make an awesome campaign ad.
 
The freezing is on the RPF side. The multiple posts is on the user side when you try resubmitting or refreshing the page in the middle of said freeze :-P

Negative. Without resubmitting or refreshing the timeout ends in multiple posts.
 
Honestly not feeling the whole "family of four" deal. It's essentially penalizing people who don't want or have a large (larger) family. Seems he could have done without that part. The first $50k should be exempt regardless of how many are in your household.
 
How does his facebook video have over 1 million views, but his youtube video which was only released a few hours later, has less than 5,000?

Part of it might be YouTube's thing of showing a lower view count for awhile after a video is launched.

And Facebook just makes it easier to share and get it seen by so many more people. His page has 2 million likes, so there's a good chunk of people that automatically get it right in their feed rather than having to find it on YouTube.

They actually uploaded it twice on Facebook... the first one has over 1.13 million views, 30k+ shares, 25k likes and 2k comments.

And the second version has over 51k views, 2,200 shares, and 7k likes.

The work put in to building up his Facebook reach over the past few years will really pay off now.
 
more details

http://taxfoundation.org/blog/economic-effects-rand-paul-s-tax-reform-plan


By
Andrew Lundeen,
Michael Schuyler

Senator Rand Paul (R-KY), a candidate for president, recently announced his plan to reform the U.S. tax code. His proposal, the “Flat and Fair Tax,” would move to a 14.5 percent tax rate on all types of income with a sizable deduction and exemption, eliminate the corporate tax to create a 14.5 percent business transfer tax paid by businesses on profits and wages, introduce full expensing for investments in capital, and eliminate the payroll tax on both the employer and employee.

Our analysis finds that Senator Paul’s plan would grow the economy by 9.4 percent in the long run, create 1.4 million jobs, and cost $2.97 trillion over ten years on a static basis and $960 billion when accounting for economic growth.

Structure of the Tax Reform Plan

Sen. Paul would make a number of changes to the tax code for individuals. He would replace the current seven tax bracket structure with a flat rate of 14.5 percent and apply that tax rate to all income – wages and salaries, capital gains, dividends, interest, and rents.

The plan would include a $15,000 standard deduction (per filer) and a $5,000 per person personal exemption. This means that a family of four would pay no income tax on their first $50,000 of income ($55,000 for a family of five, etc.).

Retirement accounts remain as they currently are and in our modeling we assumed that the exclusion for employer-provided health care remains.

The plan retains home mortgage and charitable deductions, the earned income tax credits, and the child tax credit and eliminates all other tax credits and deductions.

The plan would eliminate the payroll tax, the estate tax, and all customs duties and tariffs.

On the business side, the plan would eliminate the corporate tax, create a territorial type system, and introduce a 14.5 percent business transfer tax. This tax would be levied on a business’s factors of production and tax all capital income (profits, rents, royalties) and all labor payments (wages and salaries). All capital expenses (machines, equipment, buildings, etc.) are fully expensed in the first year, which would do away with current depreciation schedules. This tax would also apply to wages paid by governments and nonprofits.

The Economic and Revenue Estimates of the Plan

According to our Taxes and Growth Model, Senator Paul’s tax reform proposal would increase GDP by 9.4 percent by the end of roughly 10 years (it may be shorter or longer depending on how long it takes business to pull permits for new buildings, supply chains to adjust, etc.). This is equivalent to average additional growth of a little under 1 percentage point per year.

This growth is largely due to a cut in the service price of capital, which is a result of lower taxes on businesses and investment, specifically the tax cut to 14.5 percent on business profits, the 14.5 percent rate on capital gains and dividends, and the shift to full expensing. These tax changes result in an increase of the capital stock of 35.9 percent by the end of the adjustment period and results in higher after tax wages of 5.5 percent.

Additionally, the tax cut on wage income to 14.5 percent also increases the incentive to work and results in 1.5 percent additional private business hours of work. This is equivalent to 1.4 million full-time jobs.

On a static basis, Senator Paul tax reform plan would lose nearly $3 trillion over a ten-year period, with an average annual cost of about $300 billion. If we account for the growth of the economy, over time this would lead to a smaller tax costs. We estimate the revenue loss at about $1 trillion on a dynamic basis.

Distributional Analysis

On a static basis, Senator Paul’s plan would increase after tax income a total of 4 percent across all taxpayers. When not considering growth, it would have little to no effect on after tax income for those making under $10,000 of income and increase after tax income to varying degrees for all other income groups.

The little to no change in after tax income for filers with AGI under $10,000 is due to the elimination of the payroll tax and how that would interact with the change in labor compensation due to the business transfer tax, which has a secondary effect related to the phase-ins of the child tax credit and the earned income tax credit. On the whole, many people in this income group would likely receive a tax cut.

On a dynamic basis, the plan would increase after tax incomes by a total 16 percent for all income groups. Filers with income below $10,000 would see their income increase by over 10 percent. Taxpayers in income groups between $20,000 and $75,000 would see their incomes go up by about 14. Those with incomes above $500,000 would see their incomes go up over 20 percent.

More at link(copy-paste screws up format)
 
Shared his plan with my social network last night and it got unanimous support. My network is slanted liberal. Its a very good sign.
 
Shared his plan with my social network last night and it got unanimous support. My network is slanted liberal. Its a very good sign.

I imagine it would as it ends loopholes that favor the wealthy. From a populist point of view it appears fair and that's exactly what most people want.
 
"Not sure why I noticed this, but in Rand's tax video, the kid/laptop clip at 0:19 and of the flag at 1:12 are the same clips from this 2012 Gingrich ad at 0:44 and 0:04, respectively"

I am sure somebody, somewhere will somehow cry plagiarism over it.
 
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I want to see someone actually blow up 70,000 pages of tax code.

C'mon, youtubers!

A box of copy paper is 5k sheets (10 reams @ 500 sheets/ream), so 14 boxes for 70k pages. Easy-peasy.

"You see your duty quickly, citizen," said Sideki. "You should do all this before this very day is gone." --R.A. Lafferty, Polity and Custom of the Camiroi
 
Honestly not feeling the whole "family of four" deal. It's essentially penalizing people who don't want or have a large (larger) family. Seems he could have done without that part. The first $50k should be exempt regardless of how many are in your household.
The proposal is $15k exemption per filer (so $30k joint) and $5k per dependent. It's relatively consistent (but with larger numbers) with the current tax code where a single filer gets ~$10k in deduction/exemptions; married gets ~$20k; additional dependents are ~$4k exemption.
 
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