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by humanrebar
4213 days ago
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I still don't buy your logic. How is a transaction tax (sales tax) practically different than a gross income tax? I'm all for simpler algorithms, but assuming that's our goal, I'm not sure all this discussion about income taxes isn't starting from the wrong point. We should be looking for taxes that are relatively easier to enforce, like property taxes. EDIT: Yeah, I looked it up:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_receipts_tax There's drawbacks to that sort of scheme, but it's certainly feasible. After all, individuals pay taxes on their adjusted gross revenue (income). |
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Yes, one way to avoid the complexity of implementing a proper income tax is to tax something other than income. But there are reasons we tax income rather than consumption or property. Consumption taxes are regressive--poor people carry more of the overall tax burden. Property taxes have the undesirable characteristic that they often require you to pay money you don't have in cash. Just because your house doubles in value doesn't mean you have the cash to pay double the property taxes on it. Except in certain cases involving inheritance or gifts, income taxes don't force you to sell property that increases in value just to pay the tax on it. Also, with property taxes you run into complexity in defining "property." You'll either draw arbitrary lines (land is property, but stock isn't), and distort the economy as people invest more in untaxable property, or run into trouble valuating intangible property like stock ownership and IPR.
There's a reason why every developed nation has settled on income taxes. The basic principle is something people can get behind. The existence of society and government helps you gain wealth, so it seems reasonable to people to tax a percentage of that gain in wealth. Moreover, people keep track of changes to wealth even without the tax regime (modern accounting predates the modern income tax by centuries), which makes income taxes relatively easier to administer.