phil_20686, on 2012-August-19, 04:07, said:
Ok, what about a flat tax on income, period? No deductions except wages and costs of materials. That's already more of a break than the workers get. They don't get to deduct the cost of their houses (at least here) or the other mundane bits such as energy usage that they have to pay to cover the costs of living, so why should a company not also have to pay for the costs ITS existence entails? Then the actual true costs of things would show up and it would likely be less appealing to send trees from Alberta to Japan to be made into toothpicks and sent back to Wisconsin. .
It would POSSIBLY cut a little into the incentive to bring everything in from another country also, if the wages were deductable but the transportation costs and so forth were not. As the price of fuel goes up those will be getting to be more and more of an issue, and why should taxpayers encourage that by not requiring companies to pay those costs if they choose to put their businesses offshore?
And a flat tax would certainly simplify tax codes, if that's the goal. I don't know what such a tax should be, but pehaps it should be in line with the rate that the average worker for the company pays?
What it appears to come down to is a matter of values, whether people or businesses are more important and which should have priority. I am not convinced that IBM or Walmart or Exxon or even Pfizer or ANY single business is so important that the world could not get along without it, so it should pay its own way and earn the patronage of consumers. If it cannot do that, then maybe it needs to rethink some of its business practices or maybe it isn't really a viable company.
I find it disingenuous to suggest that Big Pharma is badly treated because of patent laws. The markup and profits such companies show suggest otherwise. Big Pharma is worth a thread of its own...
Of course, putting in a flat tax would cause chaos for a while, at least, (at least if it also wiped out all the deductions) and is in direct opposition to the "global market" way things are going. So it will likely be seen as undoable. But I can't see how the way things are going is sustainable either, so thought I'd throw it out there.
On a radio talk show today one caller said that governments (and big business?) need to STOP thinking of the taxpayers as ATM machines. You put in a law and get out money...