[Vision2020] The tax solution!!!
Kenneth Marcy
kmmos1 at verizon.net
Sat Aug 23 11:46:21 PDT 2008
On Saturday 23 August 2008 10:00:30 Kai Eiselein wrote:
> Since studies have proven that income is directly related to education
> level, taxes should be based ones education level. High school dropouts
> would pay the least percentage of taxes, while those with advanced/multiple
> degrees would pay the most. How's that for fair?
There may be a tertiary sense in which fair is applicable in that fair can
suggest blond, which may imply, fairly or not, less than entirely brilliant.
Otherwise, the suggestion is better characterized as unfocused and
counterproductive.
Taxes, as usually calculated, are direct functions focused on the financial
values of incremental sales or income, or, in the case of property,
considered to be indirect functions. Taxes are not focused on the personal
characteristics that may be necessary to create or catalyze the transactions.
For example, taxes are not levied on the gift-of-gab and the closing skills a
salesman uses to finalize a deal. Taxes are not levied on the brain-power a
professional must bring to bear on a client's problem to solve it. Taxes are
not levied on the quality of soil that produces a farmer's crops. Taxes are
levied on the financial values of the transactions that result from those
characteristics. So, taxing education level is inappropriate because that is
focused on a characteristic, not a transaction value that results from it.
The suggestion is counterproductive in that it tends to encourage more
unwanted behavior, and discourage wanted behavior. It encourages some sixteen
year old kid to drop out of high school, and, for example, to learn a
financial calculator, and to try to join the already over-crowded population
of real estate workers. For the kid who is unable, or unwilling, to learn the
calculator, and do the work necessary to complete transactions, it results in
yet another individual not earning his or her share of the financial costs of
the society within which he or she attempts to survive. It discourages
continuing education in any format, which is counterproductive to the
desirable goal of higher incomes, not to mention the higher qualities of life
enjoyed by the better educated and the communities in which they reside.
Ken
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