Does Rick Perry want to undermine traditional marriage? This question leaps out from his new 20 percent flat-tax plan, which would eliminate all tax advantages for married couples where one spouse is the primary breadwinner.
For more than 60 years, the federal income tax has treated the family as an economic unit. A husband and wife have the benefit of pooling their income in a joint tax return, which affords larger deductions and lower rates.
And here's another:
Although the Perry plan’s most striking feature is its anti-marriage bias, his proposal for corporate income is equally pernicious. Perry would shift businesses to a “territorial” tax system, which means that corporations would be taxed only on the profits they earn inside the United States.
We should do exactly the opposite. We should reduce or eliminate taxes on businesses that employ Americans producing goods and services inside our own country, while increasing taxes on the profits that corporations earn by outsourcing or manufacturing overseas.
Indeed!
1 comment:
Agree with her 100% on the basackwardness of the corporate taxes.
But the libertarian in me doesn't mind a flat tax. I don't believe there should be a marriage benefit built into the tax code any more than a marriage penalty. If I had my druthers, I'd go for a consumption tax, but that doesn't seem to be getting much traction beyond Neil Boortz
Post a Comment