Zakharra wrote:
I cannot see this as being anything but overly complicated. A sliding scale on the price of things depending upon profit and resource allotment? That would tend to make things much harder to plan for since you could have the price of almost everything adjusting on a daily basis. Also what about the stockholders? They are the ones the company works for in the end. Would any dividends the stockholders get be counted as a positive resource allotment?
Methinks thou doth complicate matters overly much.
Use the government data to set the tax rate on current prices to optimize tax revenue. Leave the tax rates at that level indefinitely and collect taxes on all retail purchases. How is this complicated?
The complicated part is deciding what the rate is. Once decided, the rate stays the same.
As for dividends, paying them would be evaluated against reinvestment. Dividends would not be taxed at all and flow to the owners of the company paying dividends.
The sales tax is regressive. This can be mitigated by the sales tax exemption cards. Even so, the folks who just make enough not to qualify pay a larger portion of their income on unavoidable expenses than those that are richer. I can see setting a luxury tax on items priced above some to be determined level.
Regressivity at some level is not altogether bad. A larger portion of the population will pay taxes. That means there is a larger part of the population who care about what the pols do with their money.