by The_Toecutter » Thu 09 Aug 2012, 01:24:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('careinke', 'T')oecutter,
Nice post and some good points to think about. I have to disagree with taxing corporations. All that would do, is accelerate companies leaving the country.
They'd only leave if they couldn't make any profit here. The profit margins of the largest 500 corporations are currently at record levels; many of them pay no taxes at all, and some actually receive money taken from taxpayers with threat of force. They're still shipping jobs overseas. The corporations have the money(some with net worth exceeding that of entire 1st world nations); the majority of working, real, flesh and blood people do not.
If taxes were sufficient to cut their margins of multinationals making more than $1 billion profit per year to under 7% of revenue(many enjoy margins in excess of 30%, but the average is somewhere around 10%), they'd still stay in the U.S., as it would cost much more to leave outright than they could save over decades by leaving. And you know what? If they do leave, there's nothing unconstitutional about instituting tariffs on these multinational companies selling goods inside the U.S. but refusing to be subject to its tax laws by producing them outside of the U.S. Such a tariff in conjunction with a hefty 40% tax on their profit margins over $10 million and
no loopholes would ensure their continued existence in the U.S., at least until smaller businesses in the U.S. take back the economy and kill the need for most of these multinationals.
We do need a new system of generally accepted principles in accounting to make this a realistic proposal.
American industry can be revived on a more accountable and local scale. It is needed if the U.S. is to have any sort of decent living standard at all in the future.
“Efficiency” has little use to the public good if all of the gains are concentrated among a select few people, especially if those gains are made at the expense of laborers.
Globalization, often forced on other nations against their will, has been an unmitigated disaster for our economy, our national sovereignty, our environment, and our civil liberties.
Like big government, big business has got to go. They continually prop each other back up and reinforce each other, at everyone else's expense. Most importantly of all, transnational corporations are not people, and they have lots and lots of money, and have contributed to the looting of our national wealth and heritage over the decades. It makes perfect sense to take it back from them!
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') believe a consumption tax, with a prebate to offset the tax up to the poverty level, (Thereby completely untaxing the poor), would work better. A good start would be the "Fair Tax" (HR-25).
I'm against requiring small, independent businesses to keep obsessive track of paperwork. It's a burden that prevents most of them from success. The owners either have to spend more labor than a full time job keeping track of paperwork(thus, often truly working at below minimum wage), or spend way too much money for others to do it for them. Sales taxes
free enterprise at its most basic, accessible levels to the common person. It's so burdensome that there is an epidemic of single-person independent contractors being paid in cash and doing their work off the record; they don't have enough hours in a day to make their business compete otherwise if they wish to keep it all legal, and simultaneously wish to earn a livable wage.
VATs are contributing to the destruction of Europe as we speak.
It's better to tax non-human, massive, bureaucratic entities that hold the majority of the wealth, as that is a tax that entails no sacrifice from the average person, while also failing to violate the constitutional rights of a real human entity.
If the taxes cause the multinationals to raise their prices, all the better, since less of their products will be bought from a citizenry with limited money. Small businesses unburdened by any taxes at all would easily out-compete them within their local markets once established. The operation of Walmart and their ilk of transnationals would become untenable unless people paid a lot less to net profit margin for the purchase of their goods and services(meaning, prices would have to come down, so raising prices to pad more profit margins to compensate for the tax would be counterproductive to the corporation).
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')ne of the reasons I like it, is it encourages companies to stay in the US.