320 Years of History
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Simple yes/no question. It doesn't matter why you think tax reform should be revenue neutral or why you think it should not be revenue neutral.
- Look at the definition of the term -- you can research it yourself if you want to, but there's not much to research.
- Evaluate for yourself whether tax reform/changes should be revenue neutral or not.
- Answer the question, yes or no, in accordance with the preponderance of where your opinion falls after considering what the term means and what its implications are and are not.
The term Revenue Neutral implies changes in the tax laws that result in no change in the amount of revenue coming into the government's coffers. In other words, a tax proposal is revenue neutral if it neither increases nor decreases tax revenues when compared to existing law. For instance, a revenue neutral provision may require individuals to pay less tax, but corporations will pay correspondingly more taxes. The concept was the decisive factor in drafting the Tax Reform Act of 1986 “whereby provisions estimated to add revenue were offset by others estimated to reduce revenue, so that on paper the new bill would generate the same amount of revenue as the old tax laws.”
For the sake of the thread and poll:
- Corporate income taxes are taxes assessed and paid by organizations that are incorporated...S Corp or C Corp, it doesn't matter between the two, but the meaning is limited to one or the other of the two.
- Personal income taxes are everything else....that is, taxes paid by individuals, couples, groups, and folks whose business income and losses pass through to them and the business taxes are assessed and paid as part of one's personal or joint income tax filings/payments. Given the IRS' regulations, LLCs are included here and not with corporations.