In the winter of 1996, Steve Forbes--publisher, heir, and
presidential candidate--captured the American imagination with his
proposal for a flat tax. But while Mr. Forbes claimed that such a
tax would level the economic playing field by eliminating countless
loopholes and miles of red tape, his actual proposal betrayed such
claims to fairness by overtaxing workers and undertaxing financial
capital.
In the face of recent proposals for dramatic and far-reaching
tax reform, Taxing America takes a critical look at the way the
federal government collects its revenue and exposes the bias at the
heart of a system which claims to be objective and fair. Contrary
to traditional tax scholarship, these writers argue that an
awareness of disability discrimination, economic exploitation,
heterosexism, sexism and racism is crucial to any analysis of tax
policy.
Gathering together essays whose topics range from federal
housing policy to environmental clean-up costs to tax treaty policy
making, Karen B. Brown and Mary Louise Fellows present a philosophy
that is as simple as it is radical: economic arrangements
contribute significantly to the creation of social hierarchies and
the perpetuation of discrimination. Given this reality, Brown and
Fellows maintain that the goal of the federal tax law should be
social justice and the disruption of discriminatory and
exploitative practices.
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