Flat tax rate, also known as single-rate, is one of the simplest taxations. Flat is a single tax rate (same percentage) on the whole taxable amount. A flat tax rate is used because of its simplicity, transparency, neutrality, and stability. Flat tax rates are quite transparent because it makes it easier for taxpayer to estimate their tax liability and for policymakers to estimate how changes would impact tax revenue. One simplified example is a flat tax rate in Colorado. There is a flat tax rate determined at 4.4%. Assuming that an annual taxable income is $100,000, then the income tax is equal to $4,400. A flat tax rate on income is used in many
states of the USA, like Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Utah; or internationally, such as in many post-Soviet countries like Hungary, Serbia, Estonia or Ukraine; and in Iceland or Bolivia. In practice, no state has a perfectly flat income tax rate, and every state makes certain distinctions between types of income and has several discounts and reductions. A
poll tax, also known as a head tax, is a flat tax of a set dollar amount per person. As an example, in the history of the USA, a poll tax was introduced in 1870, which was a fee paid for the right to vote. The marginal tax in these scenarios would be constant (in case of a poll tax—zero), but these are both forms of regressive taxation and place a higher tax burden on those who are least able to cope with it, often resulting in an underfunded government leading to increased deficits. ==Marginal==