Armey's flat tax bill calls for a 20% tax on wages, fringe benefits and self-employment earnings, with exemptions for interest, dividends and capital gains. The flat tax rate is supposed to fall to 17% after two years--the figure usually cited by Forbes--but, in fact, the rate would actually have to be considerably higher than the proposed 20% to avoid enormous additions to the federal budget deficit.
A computer microsimulation analysis of the effects of the Armey-Forbes flat tax plan on Texans by Citizens for Tax Justice finds that under the plan at its proposed 20% tax rate:
"Because the flat tax cuts taxes so drastically on super-rich people like Steve Forbes, it inevitably means much higher burdens on everyone else," noted CTJ director Robert S. McIntyre. "Our new analysis quantifies the size of those increased burdens on residents of Texas."

*As proposed for the first two years in the flat tax bill as introduced.
**With exemptions as proposed and no transition rules.
+Compared to federal personal and corporate income taxes and other taxes repealed by the flat tax.
++ No federal income, etc. tax under current law in this group.Citizens for Tax Justice, March 8, 1996.
The new flat tax would also be imposed on employer-paid fringe benefits, including benefits paid by state and local governments and non-profit organizations. Individuals would no longer be taxed on their interest, dividends, capital gains and other "unearned" income. All itemized deductions, for state and local taxes, mortgage interest, charitable donations and so forth would be repealed, as would all federal tax credits.
Although the flat tax offers large exemptions against the wage portion of its tax--$10,700 per taxpayer and $5,000 per dependent in 1996 dollars--it taxes fringe benefits such as health insurance and employer-paid social security taxes with no exemptions. As a result, lower-income working families that now owe no federal income tax will pay substantial taxes under the flat tax.
Businesses would file tax returns similar to those currently filed, except that: interest and dividends income would be exempt from taxation; capital expenditures would be deducted immediately rather than depreciated over time; interest paid would no longer be deductible; and 100% of meals and entertainment outlays (rather than only 50% under current law) could be deducted.
In the aggregate, these changes in corporate taxation would eventually appear to wipe out most taxes on corporations. Flat tax proponents, however, claim their plan would raise large amounts from business. That claim is based on the absurd notion that companies that have invested heavily in recent years would be subject to huge tax penalties on their past investments (due to loss of depreciation deductions).
The Armey-Forbes flat tax plan's cavalier attitude about business taxation has been sharply criticized as unfair and irrational. Indeed, the almost random effects on different businesses from the lack of "transition rules" could cause huge economic dislocations and a sharp downturn in the economy. That is why even the otherwise pro-flat tax Kemp Commission report called for "generous" transition rules as part of any tax overhaul.
Huge increases in the budget deficit would drive up interest rates, and throw the economy into recession. Alternatively, were the federal government to try to offset these huge deficit increases through program reductions, that would require cuts in federal programs even larger than those contemplated in last year's congressional budget plan. Under that legislation, not only were Medicare and Medicaid under assault, but state and local government were expected to lose huge amounts in federal aid.
No matter which alternative scenario is chosen, most Texans would pay much higher taxes under the flat tax, with average tax increases in the $30,000 to $100,000 income groups ranging from $900 a year to more than $3,000 annually.
"There's no free lunch here," noted McIntyre. "If the flat tax is designed to cut taxes by $150 billion or $200 billion a year, that will mean doubling the deficit or huge reductions in federal services, coupled with higher taxes on most families, higher interest rates and, most likely, a deep recession. If the flat tax rate is increased or its exemptions are lowered to try to break even, then almost everyone's taxes except the very rich's must go up even more."
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