Stimulus Plan Needs Better Ideas

 

Better ideas: Whatever happened to the idea of putting money directly into paychecks by cutting the payroll tax -- FICA -- the one tax everyone pays? Just a one-line proclamation would stimulate the economy and provide relief to families who have only one remaining income to fund their lifestyle.

Sure, FICA is supposed to fund Social Security. But since we've already gobbled up the so-called "Social Security trust fund" anyway, why not try to make hiring less expensive for employers, who pay half of FICA? Lower hiring costs could go a long way toward creating -- or saving -- those 3 million jobs the president keeps talking about.

The Fair Tax advocates are coming out of the woods. And maybe they have a point that will get some attention this time around. It's a national sales tax with appropriate exemptions for basic spending.

There would be no income tax, either corporate or personal. Instead, you would give the government 23 cents on every dollar you spend -- and only when you decide to spend it.

Without withholding, working people would get an immediate boost to the bottom line in their paycheck, as much as 50%! Now, that's a stimulus!

The Tax Foundation estimates we Americans will spend $350 billion just complying with the current income tax code in 2009. Think of the savings if we collected taxes only on spending instead of filing all those forms and paying all those accountants. A side benefit: The underground economy would be taxed when they go shopping. And all the offshore corporate profits could be repatriated without the bit of taxes at a 35% rate.

What's wrong with these easy solutions? The big problem seems to be that they'd take power away from Congress.

I've often said that the only thing worse than having an economic problem is Congress deciding it has the solution! The stimulus bill is even more proof. And that's The Savage Truth!

  • Loading Comments...
  •  
1 2
Next >

SHARE:

  • email
  • print
  • comment
  • digg
  • delicious
  • linkedin
Terry Savage is an expert on personal finance and also appears as a commentator on national television on issues related to investing and the financial markets. Savage's personal finance column in the Chicago Sun-Times is nationally syndicated. She was the first woman trader on the Chicago Board Options Exchange and is a registered investment adviser for stocks and futures. Savage currently serves as a director of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Corp.

Recent Comments





Connect with TheStreet

Dow Jones S&P 500 NASDAQ 10-Year Note
10,441.12 1,109.18 2,206.91 35.96
Oil *
73.55
DOWN
10.88
UP
1.25
UP
5.86
DOWN
0.07
10 Yr
3.60%
SPDR Gold
111.59
-0.10%
+0.11%
+0.27%
-0.19%
Data delayed 20 minutes

More From TheStreet

Latest Headlines

Brokerage Partners

TheStreet Premium Services

All Services