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Chapter 16 - Taxes on goods and services

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Chapter 16 on taxes of goods and services

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  • March 13, 2023
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  • 2021/2022
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CHAPTER 16
Taxes on goods and services

Indirect taxes
 Taxes on commodities and market transactions = indirect taxes.
 A characteristic of indirect taxes → likely be shifted.
 Indirect taxes → do not have to be collected once off → can be imposed in
stages.
o Collected once off → single-stage commodity tax.
o Collected more than once → multi-stage commodity tax (e.g VAT)
 E.g. VAT → levied at different stages of the production process →
starting at the resource stage when raw materials are procured from
say mining or farming → manufacturing, when the next stage of the
tax is levied → wholesale and retail stages.
 Indirect taxes may be:
o Selective or narrow-based → excise tax, customs duties
o General or broad-based → VAT when there are no exemptions and zero-
rating → a turnover tax or a general sales tax.
o Excise duties → selective taxes levied on specific goods and transactions
→ levied on domestic or imported goods (tariffs or customs duties if levied
on imported goods)
 Specific or unit taxes, or ad valorem taxes (percentage of value)
 VAT without exemptions and zero-ratings is broad and general and
the excise taxes are the opposite (highly selective.)
 Introduce plenty of exemptions and zero-ratings to VAT →
becomes increasingly less broad and more selective → VAT
increasingly resembles an excise tax → sliding away from
broad tax towards selective tax.
o Sumptuary/sin tax → selective excise tax imposed to reduce consumption
of certain good (carbon taxes, tax on tobacco and liquor, sugar tax.)

, Critical assessment of indirect taxed:
 Merits of indirect taxes
o Practical way to raise revenue from people who may otherwise be outside
of the tax net → relies on the principle that everyone that benefits from
government services should contribute at least something → conforms to
the benefit principle.
o Included in the prices we pay → tax is invisible → called fiscal illusion
(when people pay taxes they are unaware of)
 These taxes are less likely to experience tax resistance.
 Downside to that is that these taxes are also not transparent
as good governance principles would require.
o Unlike direct taxes, these taxes can be avoided by the taxpayer by not
transacting for the taxed commodity, or by substituting a non-taxed
commodity for the taxed one.
 Taxpayer has a degree of control over indirect tax liability.
 However, VAT on necessities for instance cannot be avoided
altogether.
o Indirect taxes → used to achieve multiple policy objectives through high
sumptuary taxes on carbon emissions, tobacco and liquor → even through
excise taxes on luxury, capital-intensive goods shift production towards
labour-intensive necessities.
o Ad valorem taxes are automatically indexed for inflation.
o Simple to administer.
o Consumers have limited scope to evade these taxes and compliance is →
easier to enforce.
 Disadvantages of indirect taxes
o Broad-based = efficient and raise adequate revenue while adhering to the
benefit principle of fairness
 Can violate the ability to pay notion of fairness → regressive.
 Exemptions and zero-ratings in our VAT system → makes our VAT
no longer a general tax → introduce selectivity and non-neutralities
= efficiency considerations are at stake.

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