PeterZ wrote:Let's discuss income taxes. Are they the best means to tax a sovereign people?
One argument against an unrestricted income tax is that the tax is a tacit assertion that the government owns all of the citizens' income and allow them to keep some of that income.
Nonsense. It is an assertion that if you wish to be a member of a society you have a responsibility to contribute to its upkeep as you are able.
The officials who set the tax at 100% would not be re-elected but they could do it.
Of course they could do it. And then of course they wouldn't get re-elected. And then of course their replacement would lower it again.
That's how an elected government works.
And?
I would prefer some sort to sales tax as opposed to the income tax.
Which is exactly backwards.
The poorest people with the least income must generally spend the highest proportion of that income. And so you are now taxing the poor at the highest rate. While the right simply park their cash in ever increasing massive amounts in some savings or investment instrument and you are on a path to runaway wealth inequality.
Taxing income is not responsive to the ebb and flow of the economy. A sales tax incents government to encourage economic activity. The more activity, the more tax revenue. Effectively people voluntarily pay their taxes. Sales tax rates can vary from 0% to some higher number for luxury goods. Let low income people get tax exempt cards. They need to be applied for every year.
If you are going to exempt the poor from being taxed on purchases, not tax income, and rely mainly on the purchase of luxury goods for any higher rates of taxation you are going to rapidly bankrupt your hypothetical country. (Or simply see it slide into ever deteriorating states of disrepair and neglect)