PDA

View Full Version : Brookings: "The VAT Is Almost Inescapable"




emazur
04-18-2010, 02:37 AM
http://www.brookings.edu/opinions/2010/0414_VAT_aaron_sawhill.aspx

A major portion of deficit reduction over this period is going to have to come from tax increases. The cleanest way to raise enough revenue to prevent fiscal crisis is to do what every other developed nation in the world has already done -- impose a broad tax on most consumption.

Such a tax should be collected at all stages of production in comparatively small amounts, based on the value added at that stage of production. What this means is that a producer that buys $70 worth of inputs from other companies and sells its product for $100 pays tax on the $30 of "value added." If all producers, including retailers, pay this tax, the full value of each good that consumers buy is taxed.

Liberals fear that a consumption tax is regressive, and conservatives fear that it would stimulate greater government spending, but the evidence from other countries suggests both fears are exaggerated.

Given both the importance of preventing debt from ballooning at a rate that could produce another financial crisis and the constraints on filling the budget gap with spending reductions alone, a value-added tax seems almost inescapable.

Winston Churchill once said of democracy that it is the worst form of government except for all the others. Much the same can be said of the value-added tax. It is the worst way to prevent excessive growth of public debt, except for all the others.

Goddamn, Brookings sucks. When they're not calling for a new world order http://www.brookings.edu/papers/2009/09_g20_bradford_linn.aspx
they're calling for more taxes, and in the same article linked up top, they're saying we need to be spending even more

awake
04-18-2010, 05:27 AM
In Canada this is called the goods and services tax. They lied and pushed it on us many years ago.

sratiug
04-18-2010, 05:51 AM
We have already done what all the other developed countries have done, because most states already have a sales tax that taxes the entire value of every good, and the states provide the most services to the people. A federal consumption tax would just add to that rate.

A flat tariff is superior to the VAT, fair tax, flat tax, or any other tax.

Danke
04-18-2010, 05:56 AM
Such a tax should be collected at all stages of production in comparatively small amounts...


LOL. Ya at first. But we all know it will keep being increased as time passes.

Cowlesy
04-18-2010, 07:25 AM
If they actually pass a VAT Tax, I am going to do everything possible to curb my consumption of goods and services just to put my thumb in their eye no matter how immaterial the impact.