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1 Kyle Pomerleau, Details and Analysis of Dr. Ben Carson's Tax Plan 1 (2016)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/dabctxp0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 




TAXO
FOUNDATION

FISCAL

FACT
Jan. 2016
No. 493


The Tax Foundation is a 501(c)(3)
non-partisan, non-profit research
institution founded in 1937 to
educate the public on tax policy.
Based in Washington, DC, our
economic and policy analysis is
guided by the principles of sound
tax policy: simplicity, neutrality,
transparency, and stability.
@2016 Tax Foundation
Distributed under
Creative Commons CC-BY NC 4.0


Editor, Melodie Bowler
Designer, Dan Carvajal
Tax Foundation
1325 G Street, NW, Suite 950
Washington, DC 20005
202.464.6200
taxfoundation.org


Details and Analysis

of Dr. Ben Carson's Tax Plan


By  Kyle  Pomerleau
    Director of
    Federal Projects

Key   Findings

*   Dr. Ben Carson's tax plan would replace the federal income tax code with a
    modified Hall-Rabushka-style flat tax of 14.9 percent.

 *  Dr. Carson's plan would cut taxes by $5.6 trillion over the next decade on
    a static basis. However, the plan would end up reducing revenues by $2.5
    trillion over the next decade when accounting for economic growth, due to
    increases in the supply of labor and capital.

 *  The plan would also result in increased outlays, due to higher interest on
    the debt, creating a 10-year deficit somewhat larger than the estimates
    above.

 *  The plan would move  to a consumption  base, which would  significantly
    reduce the cost of capital. According to the Tax Foundation's Taxes and
    Growth  Model, the plan would lead to a 16 percent higher GDP  over the
    long term, provided that the tax cut could be appropriately financed.

 *  The plan would also lead to a 46.6 percent larger capital stock, 10.9 percent
    higher wages, and 5.2 million more full-time equivalent jobs.

    On a static basis, the plan would increase taxes on all income groups except
    the top 10 percent of taxpayers. The plan reduces the after-tax income
    of the bottom three income  deciles by as much as 14.8 percent. The top
    decile would see an increase in after-tax income of 16 percent and the top
    1 percent would see an increase of 33 percent.

 *  Accounting for economic  growth, all taxpayers would see an increase in
    after-tax income of at least 0.5 percent in the long term.

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