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by cs702
1264 days ago
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Without a doubt, the US tax system is broken in mumerous ways. To a close approximation, everyone agrees on that. But the OP's notion makes about as much sense as asking if Amazon can somehow draw lessons for improving the efficiency and simplicity of its global software and hardware infrastructure by studying the super-simple software and hardware infrastructure of some tiny company. It strikes me as... highly unlikely. The economy of the Faroe Islands is both very, very small (annual GDP is 166x smaller than Amazon's annual revenues) and very, very simple (45% of exports are salmon fish), making it much easier to find a really simple system that works reasonably well for everyone. A quick comparison is instructive: Population GDP
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United States 333,287,000 $25,035.0B
Faroe Islands 54,000 $3.1B
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That said, by all accounts the islands are incredibly beautiful and their people are remarkably nice. |
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For simplicity sake, a 10% tax on income would scale infinitely, no matter how big an economy grows (I’m not arguing in favor of this tax).
But the point of the article, in my opinion, is that US has a large problem, costing tax payers an estimated 40 billion in labor figuring out their taxes, where other countries have almost automated the entire process.
I think there is something to be learned from there, as most people would agree that the US tax system is a mess.