Thursday, September 9, 2010

Obama Plants the Seeds of The Flat Tax

Speaking at Cayuhoga Community College in Parma, Ohio, on September 8, 2010, President Obama planted (perhaps inadvertently) the seeds of The Flat Tax.

The president called for full expensing (100% writeoff) of investment in plant and equipment for all U.S. businesses in 2011, thereby removing the current $250,000 limit in Section 179 of the U.S. tax code.

Obama’s 100% first-year writeoff leads, in a few steps, to The Flat Tax.

1. Make expensing permanent.

2. Apply the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) to all tax filers at a 19% rate. At the same time broaden the tax base by eliminating all deductions, exemptions, and credits except for a personal allowance.

3. Integrate the corporate income tax with the personal income tax at the same 19% rate. Eliminate double taxation of dividends, tax on capital gains, tax on estates, and deduction of interest.

Voila!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Flat Tax Countries and Jurisdictions September 2010

The table that appears below is a [corrected] current list of countries and jurisdictions (some not internationally recognized) that have adopted a flat tax as of September 1, 2010, with the current rates. It replaces an earlier posting that contained some incorrect numbers and dates. [HT: Thanks Charlie]

I have been unable to find the year of implementation for Nagorno Karabakh and Abkhazia.  I include Hungary based on the government's firm statement that a flat tax will begin on January 1, 2011.  Detailed information about the specific countries appears in previous posts, including an explanation of Paraguay's inclusion.

Flat Tax Jurisdictions
Jurisdiction Year of Implementation Personal Tax Rate Percent Corporate Tax Rate Percent
Jersey 1940 20 20
Hong Kong 1947 16 17.5
Guernsey 1960 20 0
Jamaica 1986 25 33.3
Tuvalu 1992 30 30
Estonia 1994 21 0
Lithuania 1994 15 15
Grenada 1994 30 30
Latvia 1995 26 15
Russia 2001 13 24
Serbia 2003 12 10
Iraq 2004 15 15
Slovakia 2004 19 19
Ukraine 2004 15 25
Georgia 2005 20 20
Romania 2005 16 16
Turkmenistan 2005 10 20
Trinidad & Tobago 2006 25 25
Kyrgyzstan 2006 10 10
Albania 2007 10 10
Macedonia 2007 10 10
Mongolia 2007 10 10,25
Montenegro 2007 9 9
Kazakhstan 2007 10 15
Pridnestrovie 2007 10 0
Mauritius 2007 15 15
Bulgaria 2008 10 10
Czech Republic 2008 15 19
Timor Leste 2008 10 10
FBiH 2009 10 10
Belarus 2009 12 24
Belize 2009 25 25
Nagorno Karabakh   5 5
Seychelles 2010 15 35
Paraguay 2010 10 10
Hungary 2011 16 10
Abkhazia   10 18

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Grenada is an Established Member of the Flat Tax Club

Fearful that the political leadership in Grenada was about to create a mini-Cuba in the Eastern Caribbean, the United States invaded the island in 1983 and restored the status quo ante government to power.

Grenada's current income tax system is based on the Income Tax Act 36/1994.  It set a single rate of 30% on all income exceeding East Caribbean Dollars 60,000, about US$22,346.  (US$1 = XCD 2.685) The rate and threshold apply to salaried persons, sole proprietors, and professionals.  The 30% rate also applies to company profits.

There is no tax on capital gains or dividends.

Per capita income is in the neighborhood of US$6,200, which means that a substantial number of employed or self-employed of the Grenadian population (about 104,000) is not caught in the income tax net.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Amendments to Serbia’s Personal Income Tax

Serbia first implemented its flat tax on personal income, set at 14%, in 2003 (the corporate rate was set at 10%, at which level it still remains). On March 23, 2010, the Serbian Parliament approved amendments to the Personal Income Tax Law. Details are as follows:

Individuals pay 12% on wages and salary income.

The capital gains tax is 10%, reduced from 20%.

The tax rate on income from dividends is 10%, reduced from 20%.

The tax rate on income from insurance is 10%, reduced from 20%.

The tax rate on a self-employed person is 10%, except a special rate of 15% is charged on self-employed income exceeding 6 times the average annual salary, after deducting exemptions. (Only the self-employed are subject to the 5% surcharge.) Salaried and self-employed receive an exemption on all income up to 3 times the average annual salary.

The 10% tax rate applies to income up to Serbian Dinars 3,288,528. (US$1 = SRD 80.98) Thus the 15% rate only takes effect on annual income exceeding $54,148. Average gross annual salary is $6,620.40. Only a very small portion of the population, and even among the self-employed, pay the surcharge.

Resident foreign nationals and Serbian citizens are subject to the same rates and enjoy the same exemptions.

Friday, August 13, 2010

The Republic of Abkhazia Maintains a Flat Tax

Abkhazia is an internationally unrecognized state but which has enjoyed a form of de facto independence since 1993. Its history can be read here and here.

Abkhazia has an independent tax system. Its main components are personal income tax, company profits tax, value added tax, and payroll tax. The Russian text can be read here and the English text here.

Personal income tax is charged at a rate of 10%.
Business profits tax is charged at 18%.
Value added tax is set at 10%.
Social insurance tax is set at 20% of payroll.

[Note: I have been unable to find publicly available information on details of the several federal taxes, e.g., deductions, exemptions, credits, etc., nor explicit details of local taxes. I will post this information as it becomes available.]