This of course is utter nonsense. All it would do is drive commerce underground and into the black market, just like Greece.Blind groper wrote:To laklak
Certainly. That is why the amount to be taxed is a variable, depending on type of business.
The thing is, though, that it puts all businesses of a particular type on a "level playing field". If, f'rinstance, you have a business that makes an average 10% profit on turnover, and it gets taxed at 5%, then all businesses of that type get taxed at 5%. If this is not sufficient to make the business viable, all such businesses will have to make changes, such as raising prices, or cutting costs. But they are all in the same boat. There is nothing anti-competitive here.
Such a tax regime will require a change in the way people do business. But it is all do-able, and it is not difficult. For a start, the business will save an awful lot of money not paying expensive lawyers and accountants fees! The tax compliance cost would plummet. The system would also put an awful lot of government tax officials out of work, and force them to do something actually productive.
"So, sir, what was your stock turnover this last year?"
"Oh I sold fuck-all last year, horrible economy wasn't it."
"Really, nothing at all? Let's see your invoices."
"Here you go sir, all two of them. Terrible business it is."
You'd have to hire MORE tax inspectors to go out and inventory twice a year (and even that wouldn't work) to make sure stock and sales are "on the books."
"Tax loopholes" are the creature of government and politics and always have been. It's politicians paying favors to contributors by passing laws that benefit their cronies by lowering tax rates. Or, it's politicians pandering for votes by reducing tax rates that affect groups they want to vote for them.
It's not the lawyer's fault for being diligent in protecting their client's profits, it's the politician's fault for creating the "loophole" in the first place to curry favor.
That's why a single national sales tax is appropriate. It taxes consumption not frugality and savings, it affects everyone equally, and it allows consumers to tailor their tax burden by tailoring their consumptive habits. And limiting government collections and spending to 15 percent of last year's GDP keeps politicians working to improve, not destroy the economy.