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by Slartie
2326 days ago
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This is also called the "poor people tax", because the merchants all bake these fees into their prices, which rise accordingly for all customers, including those who pay cash, or use debit cards or credit cards without those kickbacks. In order to evade the "tax", you are basically forced to pay with a credit card that has good kickbacks (>= 2% is acceptable if I remember correctly) so you recoup those 2% that are implicitly included in any price of any good in any store. Those who lose out are people with poor credit rating, because they either have no access to the best cards or have to pay ridiculous fees to get them. In my eyes it's useless circulation of money in the best case (when recouping via kickback) and a tax on the financially illiterate or poor in the worst case. In any case it is creating a lot of expensive administrative overhead for no economic purpose whatsoever, and thus a healthy capitalistic society should want to get rid of it - which is even relatively easy to do in this case, as the European regulation demonstrates. |
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Particularly driven by https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expressions_Hair_Design_v._S...