http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2010/08/10/liberal_case_regressive_taxation/index.html"Just when you thought that bipartisanship was dead, many progressives can be found agreeing with most conservatives in opposing the adoption of a national consumption tax in the form of a value-added tax (VAT) of the kind that every other developed nation has.
The ironies are rich on both sides. Many of the conservatives who denounce the very idea of an American VAT support less efficient flat national consumption taxes, like the proposed Fair Tax.
Meanwhile, many American progressives want a European-style welfare state, but don’t want to pay for it the way the Europeans do: with payroll and consumption taxes that fall on everybody, not just the rich. Instead, they dream of funding more generous Social Security benefits and a reformed Medicare program out of higher progressive taxes on the wealthy few -- something that not even the social democratic Swedes have done.The best way to address income inequality in America is to focus on reducing exorbitant and unproductive pre-tax incomes, rather than redistribution. We want people to get rich by inventing new products or by long-term investment in enterprises that create jobs and wealth in the U.S. But steep inheritance taxes can nip hereditary dynasties in the bud. A financial transaction tax can close off short-term speculation as a road to riches, while encouraging patient investors. Capital gains can be taxed at the same rate as other forms of income. And control of professional certification can be taken away from the American Medical Association and American Bar Association and other cartels, so that America’s overpaid professionals can no longer rig entry requirements in their fields to drive up their fees.
For all these reasons,
anti-VAT progressives should reconsider a position that puts them in the same camp as Tea Party libertarians instead of European social democrats. A left-right coalition against an American VAT is bipartisanship of the most misguided kind."
The EU also gets to assess imports with a "tariff" equivalent to their VAT since the VAT raises the price of all their manufactured goods.