I was listening to Neal Bortz today, and he was talking about The Fair Tax (go figure). A caller called in and asked the question, "What will happen to the business owners who need financing or loans. If there is no tax return, how will the bank verify income?"
Bortz, in his normal greater than thou attitude (which is why most of us listen), said that, "CPA's will have to prepare certified P&L's to give to the bank." He then went on to say that most "CPA's" don't like doing tax returns anyway, and could make way more money under his system (under his system EVERYONE makes more money) doing certified docuements than tax returns. He also said that he has been asked on many occassions by non-accountants what will all the accountants do, but has never had an accountant say that they would go out of business without tax returns.
Well, I'm here to say that I definately would go out of business for 3 reasons:
1) tax returns constitute 60% of my income
2) people's saving habits will change, which will reduce my cut on investment/insurance sales (20% of my income)
3) payroll and bookkeeping would become much less important, as most of my clients only do these as a result of taxation (the other 20% of my income)
What does everyone else think about this statement, or the Fair Tax in general (not policitical views, but how it will affect our industry)?
JoshInNC
Bortz, in his normal greater than thou attitude (which is why most of us listen), said that, "CPA's will have to prepare certified P&L's to give to the bank." He then went on to say that most "CPA's" don't like doing tax returns anyway, and could make way more money under his system (under his system EVERYONE makes more money) doing certified docuements than tax returns. He also said that he has been asked on many occassions by non-accountants what will all the accountants do, but has never had an accountant say that they would go out of business without tax returns.
Well, I'm here to say that I definately would go out of business for 3 reasons:
1) tax returns constitute 60% of my income
2) people's saving habits will change, which will reduce my cut on investment/insurance sales (20% of my income)
3) payroll and bookkeeping would become much less important, as most of my clients only do these as a result of taxation (the other 20% of my income)
What does everyone else think about this statement, or the Fair Tax in general (not policitical views, but how it will affect our industry)?
JoshInNC
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