Do people realize our consumer goods economy is somewhere in the vicinity of $6 trillion annually? If we charged, say, a 25% sales tax, that would net u to $1.5 trillion, enough to fund almost 50% of the federal government's obligations this year -- and that is with all of the bailouts.
"Wade" wrote:
Sorry, but no.
Okay, you can fund 1.5 trillion of government obligations, I concede that bit.
But you forget the other side of the tax.
Impose a tax and one of two things happens:
1. Those consumers have to pay more in the form of higher prices (the "sellers just pass it on" theory). And so they don't get to spend/invest the $$$ on other stuff.
2. The sellers profits fall (the "they don't need those stinking excess profits" theory). And so *they* don't get to spend/invest the $$$ on other stuff.
Either way, the reduction in spending opportunities under 1 and 2 is roughly, you guessed it, 1.5 trillion.
Now if you think that the government spends money more effectively/more productively than "consumers" or "capitalists", fine. But in that case, don't mess around with that phony tax idea. Just nationalize the crap out of consumption and capital.
About 15 years ago, I let my credit cards get out of hand. Eventually, after trying the really dumb idea of borrowing from Mastercard to pay Visa for awhile, I had to get money from mom to pay them off.
My debt got cleared up by "taxing" my mom. Hooray.
And my mother's spending possibilities got curtailed.
Taxes do not create value. They only redistribute it.
In my opinion, the response to those who would tax should have been my mother's response to me when I asked her to bail me out.
"No."
"Nonstopdrivel" wrote: