- Source: X tax
Taxi 5 (2018)
Dr. Lamb (1992)
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The X Tax is an approach to taxation conceived by Princeton University economist and New York University School of Law professor David F. Bradford, It consists of two taxes:
The corporate tax component, referred to as the business cash flow tax, levies taxes on company sales while excluding material expenses and wages. Unlike traditional corporate income tax, firms are able to immediately expense all capital investment (called "full expensing"). This ensures that normal profit is out of the tax base and only super-normal profits are taxed.
The personal tax component, is a progressive payroll tax with the highest payroll bracket taxed at the same rate as the business cash flow tax.
The reason an X Tax is considered to be a consumption tax is because, unlike the income tax, it doesn't introduce a "double-tax on savings."
The X Tax is intended to streamline the tax code, foster economic expansion, and preserve progressive taxation. Additionally, it seeks to stimulate savings and investments by eliminating double taxation. Under the X Tax, financial transactions and instruments are not subject to taxation for both individuals and corporations. Bradford argues that "the government should exempt from taxation all dividends, interest, and other income from savings. That way, people will be treated equally by the tax system, whether they choose to spend now or save to increase their future spending power."
See also
FairTax
Income tax in the United States
Taxation in the United States
Tax reform
Notes
External links
"Bradford's Princeton Homepage". 2007-09-16. Archived from the original on September 16, 2007. Retrieved 2021-06-20.
Bradford's Working Papers, National Bureau of Economic Research
Carroll, Robert; Viard, Alan D. (2012). "Progressive Consumption Taxation: The X Tax Revisited" (PDF). American Enterprise Institute. Retrieved June 20, 2021.