I am a fan of the FairTax. I don’t think that income taxes are right… at ANY level. When taxing production, the government is laying claim to a portion of the life of the taxpayer… and I don’t feel that ANYONE has the right to lay claim to a portion of the life of another. By taxing consumption, there is no direct taxation on the production of a person, but rather on what they take up.
But that is another post…
But, as I was thinking the other day, I had a thought… Implementation of the FairTax might be a natural solution for homeowners that are underwater on their homes. The FairTax would eliminate all payroll and income taxes, replacing them with a single retail level sales tax. That tax would make up 23% of the cost of new retail goods and services. In effect, new construction homes would be subject to the tax, but existing homes would not.
While the savings for builders (and their subcontractors) would likely drive down new construction prices by some portion, there would likely be a period at the beginning where existing home prices would bump up. In effect, sellers would be able to raise their prices since the competition from new homes would be limited. In the long run, prices for new homes would return to pre-FairTax levels (or slightly higher), but there would be a window allowing some sellers to get out from under their homes.
There is also the matter of economic growth. There are a fair number of studies that point to increasing economic growth (spelled J-O-B-S) going hand in hand with the FairTax. Increasing employment would also increase housing demand… increasing prices. Again, that would help those that are just hanging on by letting them get out without resorting to short sales and foreclosures.
Related articles
- Herman Cain Rebuts Misleading Ad Against FairTax (peregrine5700.wordpress.com)
- A Very Simple Explanation of The Fairtax (paualready.wordpress.com)
- Is the Fair Tax Herman Cain’s Ace in the Hole? (economix.blogs.nytimes.com)