You have to tax the end user.
If you tax every stage of handling and production, the taxation cascades and you end up paying tax on the tax on the tax.
You have to tax the end user.
If you tax every stage of handling and production, the taxation cascades and you end up paying tax on the tax on the tax.
If you tax every stage of handling and production, the taxation cascades and you end up paying tax on the tax on the tax.
If I'm not mistaken, the GST applies only to the final end user and is not charged on products going into other products along the production scale, so i don't think that's a problem in itself
And we need tax experts running the taxation system. There is nothing wrong with significantly reducing overall taxes and then replacing them with taxes that target vices. we have such taxes already in the form of cigarette taxes and such. I'm just suggesting that we raise those taxes further while reducing general taxes, while still ensuring that the government collects enough in taxes to pay the debt over time. This means reducing government spending too.
I wold not be totally opposed to two-tiered healthcare to boot. Research shows it to work better than one-tiered.
Welcome to the GST.
If I'm not mistaken, the GST applies only to the final end user and is not charged on products going into other products along the production scale, so i don't think that's a problem in itself. The problem I see is that taxing the end product is too blunt of an instrument. For example, imagine a product that contains some environmentaly friendly chemicals and harmful ones at a 9:1 ratio and another at a 5:5 ratio. If we taxed the source producer or extractor of the harmful chemical, then the second product would be more expensive as a result of the extra cost of the harmful chemical, while the otehr product would be less expensive by avoiding so much of the harmful chemical. By taxing the end user, both products pay the same GST and so provides no incentive to actually cut back on the use of that harmful chemical.
I'm almost tempted to create a new thread and poll: Should we tax the original extractor or producer or should we tax the end user? I'd vote the former.
What happens when you are nanufacturing is that you pay the GST for the component goods and services and then claim the get that you paid back.The end user lady's the final value added shot and does not get to claim it back.
Manufacturers remit GST right away for their materials but there is a quarterly lag between shelling it out and getting it back... interest free, too. Who knows how many untold billions are collected by that fiddle? Like, how many untold billions are collected by harvesting income tax from us quarterly, that is rebated to us annually with no interest paid for all those months when they had your money?
I don't believe that a business that buys a product from anotehr business to then include it in its own production pays the GST on that product. The GST really is an exclusively end-user tax. That's one of its virtues. I'd just reverse it and make it a source tax on undesirable products and services instead and eliminate any end-user tax.
GST goes right from raw materials clear up the supply chain to finished product served to the end user.
Can they or is he dreaming?
Read NAFTA. It'll answer your questions.
Do it quickly, though, before it's history!
It's gonna beHUUUGE!
I'd prefer us to cast a wider trade net and reduce our reliance on such an unstable partner.
Read NAFTA. You'll learn what has tarrifs, preferred source countries to buy from to enjoy lower tarrifs etc but one thing you'll also learn is everybody pays GST