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![]() "Wdtabor" wrote in message ... In article , "Peter Gottlieb" writes: The general observation that consumers pay all the taxes paid by their suppliers is of course completely correct. It is somewhat amazing to consider the true amount of tax that we all pay when everything is accounted for. More than merely amazing. The Americans for Tax Reform traced the taxes imbedded in the cost of various goods. One was a Ford Taurus automobile, priced at $23,000. They found the car could have been sold, at the same profit, for $12,700 with the imbedded taxes removed. The buyer of that car, who might be under the illusion all taxation has been successfully pushed off on "the rich" pays and astounding $10,700 plus interest when he purchases that car. Surprise! Of course the big con with taxation and especially indirect taxation is that it affects the middle classes the worst. The poor have no money so they cannot spend much. However when they do spend they tend to go for branded products because of the quality. I was in India and given a choice of spending a days pay on a quality branded soap or and hours pay on a local variation it was the quality version that won out - why because poor people really want value for money and in this case, the branded soap bar lasted 20 times longer that the cheap bar. The middle classes are hit the hardest as for them they are right in the middle of the income bracket so they have a high marginal and overall tax burden. As consumers, they also get hammered and with only a little discretion over what to buy etc they have little choice about the taxes they pay. The best off are and always have been are the rich and the tax system is geared to protect them. When you have more money than you know what to do with it other than engage in conspicuous consumption then buying anything not necessary a normal life become cheap. The $1m boat brings with it a sales tax and a property tax. So what it is still cheap. The marginal rate of income tax for these people and the overall tax burden set against their income and wealth is also low. It may seem like a lot of $s but is still proportionately smaller than the middle classes. Fairer taxes to me means people paying their fair share. You cannot be more than fair to one section of society without being less than fair to the others. Shift the sales taxes away from the things people need to have to live and put tax on the things that are not essentials to live. |
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