Flat Tax
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A tax system that applies the same rate to all levels of income without brackets or graduated rates, often paired with a basic exemption.
## Flat Tax
A flat tax applies a single rate to all taxable income. While simpler than progressive systems, it is often combined with a personal allowance that creates some progressivity.
### Countries Using Flat Tax
| Country | Rate | Personal Allowance |
|---------|------|-------------------|
| Russia | 13% (15% above ₽5M) | Standard deductions |
| Hungary | 15% | None |
| Estonia | 20% | €7,848 |
| Romania | 10% | Varies |
| Georgia | 20% | None |
| Bulgaria | 10% | None |
### Effective Progressivity
Even a pure flat tax with a personal allowance creates de facto progressivity. Someone earning $20,000 with a $10,000 exemption pays an effective rate of 10% (at a 20% flat rate), while someone earning $200,000 pays approximately 19%.
### Arguments For and Against
**For**: Simple, easy to comply, low administrative cost, transparent.
**Against**: Less redistributive, may shift burden to middle class, reduces government revenue flexibility.