If printing more money to finance government operations devalues the coin of the realm, isn't that a form of taxation? — Bitter Crank
Indeed, as I mentioned, it is. I am wondering what unusual forms of taxation might work. — Jake Tarragon
a single national sales tax. — tim wood
That is ABSOLUTELY insane. 40% tax on sales, meaning on revenue?! The government doesn't even need that much money, not to mention that such a tax would effectively cripple the economy.40% tax. — tim wood
Inflation, but it's a terrible idea. Can you imagine the huge inflation that we would incur if the government had the Central Bank print all the money it currently needs? Prices would go up in a galloping manner that would be very difficult to predict & control - and thus it would be very difficult to do business in that environment.This means of course, that a dollar will tend to decrease in value (deflation I think it is called?) because there are more of them in circulation every year to represent the "national cake" — Jake Tarragon
No, because it leads to inflation and the devaluation of money. The poorest will be most affected anyway.If printing more money to finance government operations devalues the coin of the realm, isn't that a form of taxation? — Bitter Crank
I actually think the government ought to engage in commerce, especially in certain key industries. They should also lower taxes on businesses and reduce red tape with regards just to small businesses while raising taxes on profits from financial speculation and gambling for everyone.Unless a government engages in commerce to generate its own revenue, I don't see how you can avoid a tax of some kind, no matter how rococo the scheme. — Bitter Crank
Can you imagine the huge inflation that we would incur if the government had the Central Bank print all the money it currently needs? — Agustino
Business-to-business is not so simple — tim wood
Why a sales tax? What's the rationale?A sales tax, which can be targeted and vary with different products, seems rational to me, but why collect it at the check out? Why not back up 1 step and charge a tax on merchandise up-stream from retail? Tax it, for instance, at the point of wholesale purchase by the seller. Fewer transactions to monitor, that way. — Bitter Crank
I think VAT should be eliminated honestly - you don't have it in the US do you?VAT? — Bitter Crank
Yeah, here all taxes added up to 30-40% too on gross income for employees, and the employer is also responsible for deducting that. But that's very high - effectively you need gross income to be 30-40% higher than what you pay someone in hand. And people don't care what their gross income is, just what they get in hand anyway.30% to 40% — Bitter Crank
Yeah, it's an interesting thing. We think most of our economy is based on consumption, but it's really savings and investments that drive the economy. Consumption is actually quite a negative thing in excess - it basically means simply consuming value that is produced, ie destroying value.Yes, some taxes do hit the tax payer twice. Maybe quite a few do. I really resented counting interest on savings as income (back when interest rates were worth thinking about). The savings came from wages; which had already been taxed. Bad policy, it seemed to me, discouraging saving. — Bitter Crank
It's not necessarily reducing wages, it can also be increasing prices (inflation). But yes, taxes are in the end passed off from one actor to another.Some people say the individual tax payer ends up paying for most of the governments' requirements, because wage payers (businesses) reduce wages to help cover their own costs of taxation. — Bitter Crank
It does happen actually, but not the entire tax saving is passed onto workers as higher wages, and the higher wages aren't distributed uniformly - meaning people at the top get bigger increases than people at the bottom.Theoretically, if corporations were not taxed, they would pay higher wages. (I doubt it would work that way in actuality.) — Bitter Crank
I've had in mind the suspension of all taxes or tax-like revenue sources, replaced by a single national sales tax. The sales tax could be tweaked very year or two or as necessary, and could reasonably have lots of qualifications, limits, and exemptions. . — tim wood
Tim Wood suggested a 40% rate. If I remember correctly, 30% to 40% of gross income is what I paid for all taxes when I was working, rolling up all taxes together, so 40% isn't bad as an upward starting figure. — Bitter Crank
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