linusrichard
Master Poster
- Joined
- Apr 17, 2007
- Messages
- 2,710
It would be rational to consume less because the cost goes up. I drink pop. If pop cost $4 a bottle, I would drink much less pop. If pop cost $20 a bottle, I would drink no pop. Maybe on my birthday.Why would it be rational to consume less? And there are no substitutes - the tax would be the same regargless of which brand/type you bought.
As for substitutes, they don't have to be different brands/types of the same stuff - it can be different stuff. Let's say I drink beer over wine because it's cheaper. If beer gets taxed more than wine, to the point where wine is cheaper, I might start drinking wine. Let's say I manufacture Widgets out of Material X because it's cheaper than Material Y. Raise taxes on Material X high enough, and I'll start using Material Y.
I don't get this. Obviously they come from the customers. But if the business doesn't get to keep as much money with the tax as it would without the tax, how is it not bearing some of the tax?I'm still waiting for one of you guys to explain the origin of moneys businesses use to pay taxes, if it doesn't come from their customers. No one has been able to explain it yet, can you?![]()
Right, but without taxes, the business gets to keep every penny its customers give it. With taxes, it has to give away some of those pennies. Do you also think income taxes are borne by employers, because every penny that the employees get comes from their employers?Because every penny that business collects comes from their customers. the customers bear it all, any way you slice it.