It's the psychological effect of losing money that you haven't seen yet (income tax) vs paying it out yourself at the register.Calculus Man wrote:For whatever reason, consumption taxes are absolutely anathema to some Americans. I can't explain why, but it really raises their hackles. Maybe it has something to do with our huge shopping culture. I have very intelligent friends and relatives who share a strong conviction that, even if the tax burden were lessened elsewhere, the psychological effects of raising prices through a sales tax would devastate the American economy.Smitty-48 wrote:I'm not saying eliminate all these taxes obviously, they do need revenue, just the corporate tax; taxing productivity is not what you want to do, the "corporate tax" is a wholly political tax, doesn't make economic sense, it's just a populist sop, but the sales tax in Connecticut is only 6%, so I would rather raise that tax, a tax on consumption, to something like 15%, and get my revenue there, while just eliminating the 9% corporate tax altogther.Calculus Man wrote: Screw it. Smitty is right. All these retarded taxes are half of the problem.
I'm not sure I agree with them, but these are not naturally panicky people, so their predictions of economic doom did make me think.
Human nature doesn't allow the latter to be equal.