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- Xref: sparky can.general:6376 can.politics:11690 soc.culture.canada:10357
- Newsgroups: can.general,can.politics,soc.culture.canada
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!torn!skule.ecf!pelton
- From: pelton@ecf.toronto.edu (PELTON MATTHEW ALAN)
- Subject: Re: Liberal Party Tax Policy
- Message-ID: <C1FFqE.8q0@ecf.toronto.edu>
- Organization: University of Toronto, Engineering Computing Facility
- References: <C1Eoz0.H7I@mach1.wlu.ca> <C1F6qD.DBI@ecf.toronto.edu> <1993Jan25.194021.13704@csi.uottawa.ca>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 20:32:21 GMT
- Lines: 84
-
- In article <1993Jan25.194021.13704@csi.uottawa.ca> cbbrowne@csi.uottawa.ca (Christopher Browne) writes:
- >In article <C1F6qD.DBI@ecf.toronto.edu> pelton@ecf.toronto.edu (PELTON MATTHEW ALAN) writes:
- >>In article <C1Eoz0.H7I@mach1.wlu.ca> dmccrea6@mach1.wlu.ca (doug mccready F) writes:
- >>>It always scares me when parties begin talking about doing away with a tax
- >>>like the GST and implementing a single tax or one geared to ability to pay.
- >>>Tell me why the GST is not based on ability-to-pay. If I can afford a new
- >>>car or whatever, am I not demonstrating ability-to-pay? What happens to new
- >>>investment? If it is shot down then we have fewer jobs and then we have
- >>>fewer tax payers down the road and the taxes for those still working go up
- >>>and they decide to leave and that causes taxes to go up further. I for one
- >>>would be one of those leaving and I provide the government with tax funds
- >>>every week of the year. Already I can pay less taxes if I move and the
- >>>marginal changes in tax rates are casuing me to think along those lines now
- >>>let alone with a more reprehensive tax coming from the liberals.
- >>
- >> The reason a sales tax or a GST is said no not be based on ability
- >>to pay is that it is a regressive rather than a progressive tax.
- >
- >Come on - you're contradicting yourself in the same sentence.
- >
- >OF COURSE GST is "based on ability to pay."
- >
- >If you have no money, then QED there is no ability to pay GST. If you
- >pay GST, then QED, you have ability to pay.
-
- Well, it is misleading to say that it's strictly based on ability to pay.
- But it's standard politicese by now to call a progressive tax only one that's
- based on ability to pay. It's also something that people can understand.
- Most people will tune out as soon as you start talking about progressive and
- regressive taxes.
-
- >
- >>People with higher incomes pay a larger percentage of their income
- >>for income tax; this progressive system is essential to a mildly
- >>socialist state like Canada.
- >
- >And with a GST, people with higher incomes pay MORE in GST than those
- >that have LOWER incomes.
-
- More in absolute numbers. A smaller percentage of their overall income.
- That's what differentiates a progressive from a regressive tax system.
- >
- >>A GST, however, forces everybody, regardless of income, to pay the
- >>same amount every time they buy something. For poorer people, this
- >>translates to a higher percentage of their income; at the very
- >>least, disregarding the fact that richer people invest far more than
- >>poorer people, it is a flat-rate tax.
- >
- >And what is the PROBLEM with a flat rate tax?
-
- No problem. Actually, I support flat rate taxes because of the inefficiency
- and ineffectiveness of attempted progressive tax systems. I was just trying to
- explain what makes a sales tax regressive.
- >
- >Food is sold at a relatively fixed price; so are most commodities,
- >modulo some strange taxation situations that tend to cause problems.
- >The point is: Why should TAXES be the only thing that "richer people"
- >should pay more for? Based on your argument, I could argue that rich
- >people should pay more for a quart of milk than poor people. And rich
- >people should pay higher prices for everything else as well.
-
- Yah, probably. It's impractical, though. That's the argument for fixed rate
- taxes.
- >
- >On what specific basis do you justify any PARTICULAR graduated tax
- >system? "Moral" platitudes aren't enough. On what MORAL basis do you
- >choose the NUMBERS?
- >
- >A moral system that cannot answer PRACTICAL questions isn't the least
- >bit useful. It's immoral to use a system that bears no practical
- >resemblence to reality.
- >
- >In your moral system, what is the "moral" taxation function, T, which
- >maps income, I to taxes paid, P? Please show how your mapping of
- >$$ T: I \rightarrow P$$ expresses correctly the moral system.
- >
- I wasn't advocating any particular system. I was just trying to explain.
-
-
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