November 2, 2003
IMPOSED?:
U.S. Administrator Imposes Flat Tax System on Iraq (Dana Milbank and Walter Pincus, November 2, 2003, Washington Post)
The flat tax, long a dream of economic conservatives, is finally getting its day -- not in the United States, but in Iraq.It took L. Paul Bremer, the U.S. administrator in Baghdad, no more than a stroke of the pen Sept. 15 to accomplish what eluded the likes of publisher Steve Forbes, Reps. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.) and Richard K. Armey (R-Tex.), and Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Tex.) over the course of a decade and two presidential campaigns.
"The highest individual and corporate income tax rates for 2004 and subsequent years shall not exceed 15 percent," Bremer wrote in Coalition Provisional Authority Order Number 37, "Tax Strategy for 2003," issued last month.
VoilĂ ! Iraq has a flat tax, and the 15 percent rate is even lower than Forbes (17 percent) and Gramm (16 percent) favored for the United States. And, unless a future Iraqi government rescinds it, the flat tax will remain long after the Americans have left.
No nation is luckier than that which goes to war with the U.S. Posted by Orrin Judd at November 2, 2003 5:47 AM
Didn't Dick Gephart once back the flat tax at 15%?
Oh, I forgot. At one time, Dick Gephart advocated for just about anything and then later switched his position.