Reading ComprehensionDifficulty: Hard

PT147 S3 P4 Q27 Explanation

Flat Tax Systems

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TopicsAuthor OpinionSociety

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Passage

Passage

In 1994, Estonia became the first country to introduce a “flat tax” on personal and corporate income. Income is taxed at a single uniform rate of 26 percent: no schedule of rates, no deductions. So far eight countries have followed Estonia’s example. An old idea that for decades elicited the response, “Fine be working as well in practice as it does on the blackboard.

Practical types who said that flat taxes cannot work offer a further instant objection, once they are shown such taxes working, namely, that they are unfair. Enlightened countries, it is argued, have “progressive” tax systems, requiring high-income earners to forfeit a bigger share of their incomes in flat tax seems to rule this out in principle.

Not so. A flat tax on personal incomes combines a threshold (that is, an exempt amount) with a single rate of tax on all income above it. The extent to which such a system is progressive can be varied within wide limits using just these two variables. Under the systems operating in as much tax under new flat-tax regimes as they would have paid under the previous codes.

Passage

A lot of people don’t understand graduated, as opposed to “flat,” taxes. They think that if you make more money you pay a higher rate on your entire earnings, which seems unfair. Actually, graduated progressive taxes treat all taxpayers equally. Every taxpayer pays the same rate on equivalent layers of income. People of income over a specified amount. People, not dollars, are treated equally.

All people are created equal, but not all dollars are created equal. Earnings of the working poor go almost entirely for survival expenses such as food, shelter, and clothing. At that level, every dollar is critical; even a small difference causes tremendous changes in quality of life. Middle-income have much greater flexibility in absorbing small fluctuations in income.

Even some of the flat tax proposals recognize this, and want to exempt a primary layer from the tax system. So, since they recognize that survival dollars are different from discretionary dollars, why go suddenly from one extreme (paying no taxes) to the other (paying the top rate)? Since flat tax proposals it is naturally going to fall on the middle class to make up the difference.

What this question is testing

Author Opinion

Your task

Pin down exactly what the question asks about the passage — a detail, the author's view, the structure, or the main point — before looking at the choices.

Common trap

Answers that restate a true detail from the passage but don't answer the specific question being asked.

Winning move

Anticipate the answer in your own words from the passage, then find the choice that matches that prediction.

Reading along? Open the full official question in LawHub — we show a fragment here and keep the reasoning in our own words.

The question
27.

Which one of the following, if true, would be the most reasonable response for the author of passage B to make to the final

Answer choices

  1. Too Weak29% picked this

    Even under a flat-tax regime, it will be possible for some with high incomes to avoid taxes

    "Some" is almost always an answer-killer if we're doing Strengthen / Weaken / Paradox. This is just saying at least one person with high income will be able to avoid paying their full tax in a flat-tax system. It does have some logical counter to it, but its strength is ultimately too puny.

  2. Correct51% picked this

    Existing tax codes allow tax avoidance by those with high incomes mainly because they contain loopholes and special deductions,

    Why this is right

    This responds to Passage A's final point. It's saying we shouldn't think of flat tax as "very little tax avoidance" and graduated tax as "lots of tax avoidance", because there's nothing inherent to the design of either tax code that makes it vulnerable to non-payment. It's the loopholes and special deductions that get added to the tax code that create opportunities for avoidance, and that could happen in either system.

    Skill tested: Author Opinion · how this choice captures the passage's function is the move to repeat next time.

  3. No Impact9% picked this

    It is unfair to those with high incomes to single them out as tax avoiders, since people at all income levels have been known

    The author of Passage B needs to defend graduated tax systems, but this answer is defending rich people who try to avoid paying taxes.

  4. No Impact: people prefer8% picked this

    Most taxpayers prefer a system that affords them opportunities for avoiding taxes over one that does

    We don't pick our tax system based on what most people prefer, because most people would prefer to keep all the money they make. The debate of graduated vs. flat tax is about bringing in sufficient tax revenue in a way that accords with a society's values / common sense.

  5. Opposite (if anything): Introduces New Position3% picked this

    The goal of reducing tax avoidance would be advanced by eliminating income taxes altogether in favor of taxes on

    We're trying to strengthen Passage B's existing position, that graduated tax systems are better than flat tax systems. Bringing in a 3rd idea and saying, "Actually, a consumption-tax is better than both of those" is not strengthening Passage B's position.

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