The Legal Fiction of Corporate Income and the Coming U.S. Tax Reorganization in 2012
Politics / Taxes Dec 18, 2010 - 08:40 AM GMT
	 
	
   Markets  and pundits are celebrating the great tax deal “compromise” between the Obama  Administration and the Republicans. A tax deal pitched as a compromise between  the two-party duopoly that has been selling the United States into debt slavery  for decades is not likely in the best interest of the country, or your bank  account. The deal strikes me as a bit like a two-year-old eating homemade ice  cream for the first time, believing it is the greatest possible pleasure on  earth, with no earthly idea of how it stacks up against a honeymoon.
Markets  and pundits are celebrating the great tax deal “compromise” between the Obama  Administration and the Republicans. A tax deal pitched as a compromise between  the two-party duopoly that has been selling the United States into debt slavery  for decades is not likely in the best interest of the country, or your bank  account. The deal strikes me as a bit like a two-year-old eating homemade ice  cream for the first time, believing it is the greatest possible pleasure on  earth, with no earthly idea of how it stacks up against a honeymoon.
  
 
What the politicians don’t realize is that the global crisis is forcing American’s to grow up fast regarding matters of high finance and the truth about taxes. They are beginning to understand the exploitation of the current tax system. Word is spreading concerning real tax reform that could light a fire under the U.S. and global economy, and simultaneously reduce the deficit.
There are high hopes that this latest tax extension band-aid will provide some juice to the U.S. economy. However, it has only extended the old two-party regime and game of kicking the debt can down the road. The clear goal of the deal is to bring back the delusional debt binge years. Good luck with that great idea. It is a travesty that matching spending cuts were not required to match the tax cuts, as any responsible adult would have required. Unfortunately, this compromise is likely only rearranging the deck chairs of the U.S. economy, just before it slips beneath the icy surface of the long wave winter season.
The problem with the tax deal is that it represents such pathetically small thinking. It sells America short and will prove to be too little too late. It is tragic that there is such vast untapped U.S. and global potential waiting to be unleashed, and this embarrassing tax compromise is all the creativity our leaders could muster. The politicians have put us in such a big hole we have to start thinking bigger. The global economic boom that could be unleashed with real tax reform will have to wait for another day, but that day may come sooner rather than later, likely in 2012.
The next stage of the U.S. and global crisis directly ahead will change everything. What is coming is not an aftershock of the 2007-2009 crisis. That was the warm up, or you could call it the pre-shock. The real crisis is going to come with a political storm that will make the 2008 mid-terms look like civil discourse. What is coming politically is fundamentally different from anything in America’s past, save maybe the Revolution. But we had the Revolution already, what America needs now is a reorganization.
Believe it or not, I’m actually optimistic. The U.S reorganization is going to happen, in ways that will astound most Americans, and the world. The U.S. reorganization will lead the world into a global boom and new golden age.
Typically, reorganizations come as part of a bankruptcy. America will not likely go bankrupt, but it will be a narrow escape. Anyone with the pulse of the American people knows they are ready for radical fundamental change like never before. Fiscally responsible American’s from all walks of life and all social views are going to rise to the occasion and demand a U.S. reorganization. Fiscal conservatives from across this great country are going to join forces, from the libertarian left to the religious right and everyone in between, fiscal conservatives will be marching arm in arm and demanding real fiscal change before the U.S. reorganization of 2012 is over.
So what should be at the top of the list for this reorganization? Real tax reform must be at the top of the list as the U.S. goes into the reorganization period of 2012. It is almost more that a rational mind can handle, watching the relentless destruction of the U.S. economy and the abuse of the poor and middle class by the current regressive corporate tax code. Yes, I wrote regressive. The supposedly progressive politicians love to talk about taxing corporations so that the proceeds can be redistributed to the poor. It is a bold-faced lie.
The fact of the matter is that any corporate tax is regressive. It is a tax on poor, working poor and middle class that can least afford it. Politicians using talk of corporate taxes to win their votes are engaging in classical Orwellian doublespeak. The U.S. has the second highest corporate taxes in the world, and they are destroying the U.S. economy and shipping millions of jobs to countries with lower corporate tax rates.

Fortunately,  the general ignorance of these most basic facts of taxes in the U.S. is ending.  There is a great awakening occurring from online education and angry citizens  looking for answers. Objective reasoning and the clear thinking it brings is  beginning to win the war of ideas. The American people are getting wise to the  fact that corporate taxes are one of the biggest political frauds in history.  They are recognizing corporate taxes for what they are, a government sponsored  swindle that is increasing the costs of all products and services, reducing  wages, increasing unemployment and poverty across the land and crippling the  U.S. and global economy.
The FairTax.orgmovement  is catching fire. It is going to be a fire that sweeps across the country and  burns the unfair and regressive tax system to the ground. Consider the  following well reasoned statement from FairTax.org regarding corporate taxes:
Corporations are legal fictions that have not, do not, and never will bear the burden of taxation. Only people pay taxes. Corporations pass on their tax burden in the form of higher prices to consumers, lower wages to workers, and/or lower returns to investors. The idea that taxing a corporation reduces taxes on, say the working poor, is a cruel hoax. A corporate tax only makes what the working poor buy more expensive, costs them jobs, lowers their lifestyle, or delays their retirement. Under the FairTax Plan, money retained in the business and reinvested to create jobs, build factories, or develop new technologies, pays no tax. This is the most honest, fair, productive tax system possible. Free market competition will do the rest.
Once  the average American starts to understand the basic principles at work here,  they are going to turn up the heat on the politicians and demand real change,  or throw them out in 2012. The politicians in Washington and in the state  capitals around the country know the swindle of corporate taxes is being  brought into the light of day by FairTax.org.
  Before  the current political cycle is over, the class of 2010 will deliver real change  in the way of major tax reform by signing onto the FairTax.org proposal, or  their days are numbered. There will be a meeting with destiny in 2012. Maybe  the class of 2010 will make some real changes, but they are likely already  being wined and dined by K Street. It is questionable whether they are up to  the challenge, since we are told they are already being instructed and agreeing  to raise the debt ceiling as one of their first orders of business.
  There  is over $50 trillion in public and private debt in the U.S. that threatens to  crush the U.S. economy and the American people in decades of debt slavery. A  debt collapse depression is unfolding in slow motion. The municipal bond market  in the U.S. and various sovereign debt debacles are now queued up to lead in  the next wave of the great global debt collapse, which threatens to bring the  global financial system down with it. The only way to put a flow under  collapsing asset prices, including any debt that is not real AAA debt, real  estate, stocks, etc. will be a radical U.S. reorganization in 2012 with real  tax reform.
  The  U.S. and global economy will have to have growth to overcome the deflationary  collapse. The only way to get sufficient growth when the politicians have spent  decades destroying the underpinnings of the economy is reorganization. I’m not  talking about cocktails at the White House and a few percentage points of  temporary Social Security tax breaks for a minimal growth kick to the next few  quarters. I’m talking about real reform. The U.S. needs a $30 trillion economy  to grow out of the mess the politicians have created with decades of  mismanagement and bad policies.
  The  FairTax.org proposal to scrap the corporate income tax and the personal income  tax for a single national sales tax is required. It will be the only way out of  the debt death spiral into 2012. The FairTax.org proposal is a truly  progressive proposal. If President Obama, the GOP or Democrats really want to  address U.S. and global economy and financial disaster that is brewing they  will get on board with FairTax.org.
  If  the U.S. scraps the corporate and personal income tax for a single national  sales tax, the world will have to follow. Otherwise, every company in the world  will want to move to the United States and bring millions of jobs with them.  Other major economies including Germany, Australia, China, India, Brazil, etc.  will be forced to join in and abolish corporate and personal incomes taxes in  favor of only a sales tax that is the only truly viable progressive tax system.  It is then that The Great Republic will dawn and a new golden age will  commence.
It  is likely a farfetched dream, but if president Obama continues his turn toward  objectivity and reason and away from the dead and destructive ideologies of the  past, and embraces the FairTax.org plan, even I would consider voting for him  in 2012. If President Obama and the class of 2010 do not come up with real and  radical tax reform, not the same old tax games and more debt that are  bankrupting the country, they can look forward to pink slips in the U.S.  reorganization of 2012.
David Knox Barker is a long wave analyst, technical market analyst, world-systems analyst and author of Jubilee on Wall Street; An Optimistic Look at the Global Financial Crash, Updated and Expanded Edition (2009). He is the founder of LongWaveDynamics.com, and the publisher and editor of The Long Wave Dynamics Letter and the LWD Weekly Update Blog. Barker has studied and researched the Kondratieff long wave “Jubilee” cycle for over 25 years. He is one of the world’s foremost experts on the economic long wave. Barker was also founder and CEO for ten years from 1997 to 2007 of a successful life sciences research and marketing services company, serving a majority of the top 20 global life science companies. Barker holds a bachelor’s degree in finance and a master’s degree in political science. He enjoys reading, running and discussing big ideas with family and friends.
© 2010 Copyright David Knox Barker - All Rights Reserved Disclaimer: The above is a matter of opinion provided for general information purposes only and is not intended as investment advice. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and utilising methods believed to be reliable, but we cannot accept responsibility for any losses you may incur as a result of this analysis. Individuals should consult with their personal financial advisors.
© 2005-2022 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.
	

 
  
