Gaius
42
Your statement would be true if we were comparing a flat (income) tax
to a CBIT. Apples-to-apples a consumption based income tax is far simpler than our current 6,781 page tax code.
Of course, hypothetically, Congress could muck-up the definition of “investment” or “consumption” by overcomplicating it. (Is mortgage interest an investment or consumption? Is insurance consumption or investment?) But even in such a case there is zero reason to think Congress would make a CBIT more complicated than our current hodge podge.
I know nothing about the Texas tax code, but generally a sales tax is on the gross amount of sale.