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Americans For Fair Taxation

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Abbreviation
  
AFFT

President
  
Steven L. Hayes

Headquarters
  
Type of business
  
Advocacy group

Formation
  
1994

Region served
  
United States

Website
  
Founded
  
1994

Americans For Fair Taxation httpstrademarksjustiacommediaimagephpseri

Similar
  
Citizens Against Governm, Tax Foundation, State Policy Network, Citizens for Tax Justice, Club for Growth

Americans For Fair Taxation (AFFT), also known as FairTax.org, is a US political advocacy group dedicated to fundamental tax code replacement. It is made up of volunteers who are working to get the Fair Tax Act (H.R. 25/S. 122) enacted in the United States – a plan to replace all federal payroll and income taxes (both corporate and personal) with a national retail sales tax and monthly tax "prebate" to households of citizens and legal resident aliens.

Contents

According to the Clearwater, Florida-based organization, it is the largest, single-issue grassroots taxpayers union in the United States, and claims to have signed up over 800,000 supporters. The organization states that it subscribes to the ideals of simplicity, fairness, and freedom which they believe are embodied in the FairTax.

History

AFFT was founded in 1994 by three Houston businessmen, Jack Trotter, Bob McNair, and Leo Linbeck, Jr., who each pledged $1.5 million as seed money to hire tax experts to identify what they perceived as faults with the current tax system, to determine what American citizens would like to see in tax reform, and then to design the best system of taxation. The three went on to raise an additional $17 million to fund focus groups with citizens around the country and tax policy studies.

Some of the experts funded include:

  • Professors David Burton and Dan Mastromarco, University of Maryland and The Argus Group
  • Laurence Kotlikoff, Boston University
  • Stephen Moore, The Cato Institute
  • Professor Dale Jorgenson, Harvard University
  • Bill Beach (economist), the Heritage Foundation
  • Jim Poterba, The National Bureau of Economic Research
  • Professor George Zodrow, Rice University and the Baker Institute for Public Policy
  • Professor Joseph Kahn, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Criticisms

    Some have criticized Americans For Fair Taxation for the way that they present the FairTax plan. The most common critique is the presented FairTax rate of a 23% sales tax on the total transaction value of new retail goods and services purchases; consumers pay to the government 23 cents of every dollar spent (sometimes called tax inclusive). However, American sales taxes have historically been expressed as a percentage of the original sale price (sometimes called tax exclusive), this gives a 30% FairTax rate; items priced at $100 pre-tax cost $130 with the tax added. The use of the tax inclusive number in presenting the rate has been criticized as deceptive and by some as a "lie". However, AFFT argues that the 23% number represents a better comparison to income tax rates. Taxpayers in a 25% income tax bracket pay $25 in federal income taxes out of every $100 they earn. With the 23% FairTax, taxpayers would pay $23 in taxes out of every $100 they spend. This is also how the legislation is written – as an inclusive tax.

    In 2007 Bruce Bartlett wrote that FairTax was originally devised by the Church of Scientology in the early 1990s as a way to get rid of the Internal Revenue Service. Representative John Linder told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that Bartlett confused the FairTax movement with the Scientology-affiliated Citizens for an Alternative Tax System. Leo Linbeck, AFFT Chairman and CEO, stated "As a founder of Americans For Fair Taxation, I can state categorically, however, that Scientology played no role in the founding, research or crafting of the legislation giving expression to the FairTax."

    References

    Americans For Fair Taxation Wikipedia


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