Many EU countries have a “VAT” and like feel like this is kinda targeting poor people. Like, for the rich, this is insignificant, for poorer people, a (example) 20% tax would be a huge burden. Why do they do this?

🤔

  • @alvvayson@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    832 months ago

    It is, but it’s also a very efficient and difficult to evade tax. For many EU countries the VAT revenue is equal or larger than the income tax revenue.

    Most Europeans don’t mind it. You can control your spending, so VAT doesn’t hit us in inconvenient ways, like for example, taxes on cars and property.

    European countries compensate poor people with good social programs. So in the end, poor people are getting more benefits than the VAT they pay.

    • @Bruncvik@lemmy.world
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      12 months ago

      I agree overall, but VAT is not all that difficult to evade, at least in the service industry. Paying handymen in cash is common in many countries, and that’s a means to evade VAT. Hell, even using them to buy the building or landscaping materials for you (being a registered business they purchase for prices without VAT) saves you on most of the tax. Then there’s service barter. I did it only once, a long time ago, but it can serve as an example: I did family portraits (photography) for my physio, in exchange for a number of physio sessions. If we charged each other, it would have cost each of us, say, 250 Euros, but we’d only see 200 each, and the state would get 100. So, savings of 50 for each of us.

      • @alvvayson@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        22 months ago

        Sure, but those are relatively small potatoes.

        And if a single person does it a lot, then the tax authorities can easily examine their spending and prove that they are spending more than they are officially earning. And then they can apply punitive measures.

      • @Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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        12 months ago

        being a registered business they purchase for prices without VAT

        That’s not true, sorry. A business pays stuff with VAT included too, but they can later claim back the VAT they paid against the VAT they raised from selling stuff, so they don’t have to hand all of that over.

        • @Bruncvik@lemmy.world
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          12 months ago

          I’m personally not sure how it works. But when we were upgrading our bathroom, the tile shop added the VAT to the quoted sale price. I then asked a friend of mine who is VAT-registeted to buy it for us, and he got it from the same warehouse for the non-VAT price.

    • @MothmanDelorian@lemmy.world
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      342 months ago

      And yet the claim that it is regressive is accurate. It impacts those that have less wealth to a greater degree which makes it regressive.

      • @urandom@lemmy.world
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        62 months ago

        How so? A poor person would buy less things, thus pay less VAT, than a rich person buying more things

          • @Taewyth@jlai.lu
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            72 months ago

            Depends on what is being paid, the VAT model being used, the country etc.

            For instance in France the base tva is 20%, but food and hygiene products have a special status which reduces it to 5.5%

            I forgot the exact details buI if I recall correctly in Germany they have two models A and B depending on the product, forgot the percentage though. And then if you’re buying something for work the percentage can change again.

  • jrs100000
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    272 months ago

    Sales taxes, including VAT, are inherently regressive. Normally things like unprocessed food are exempted to minimize impact, but it does still affect the poor more than the rich. Why keep them? They are easy to collect, hard to avoid and can bring in lots of revenue without people noticing or complaining.

  • @fine_sandy_bottom@discuss.tchncs.de
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    252 months ago

    It’s regressive in the sense that poor people spend more of their money on goods and services that include VAT.

    It’s also “broad based” in that wealthy people spend more money (in total) on things, and the vendors of those things collect the tax.

    For example, if a company in Australia sells a $11m private jet to some asshole, that asshole just paid $1m in taxes.

    Said asshole may well pay no income tax by virtue of their ability to disappear taxable income through complex business structures.

  • @schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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    212 months ago

    What do you mean “instead of”? There are many kinds of taxes in my country, which is in the EU. I pay a huge cut of my salary in taxes every month even before I pay VAT on things I buy.

  • qyron
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    162 months ago

    Essential goods have a 6% taxation in my country (Portugal). This also applies to the first 200kw/h you use in your home.

    Then there is a 13% for services, like restaurants. I think wine is also taxed thia way.

    The higher tier is reserved for non essential items, like cookies, chocolate, fuels (which are technically being double taxed), cars, etc.

    We also pay a direct contribution for our social security system (11% over your gross salary, monthly), plus a direct taxation over our overall monthly salary (the minimum wage workers are exempt from this).

    The discussiom on these taxes is long, old and boring but it essentially boils down to having those who want something, pay for it.

  • Sockenklaus
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    142 months ago

    Yes, you’re correct: Poorer people spend most of not all of their available on income on everyday goods like groceries, clothes, etc…

    Richer people spend (relatively speaking!) less of their available income on these items and save me

  • @Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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    122 months ago

    It’s a vat. Like a vat of oil. They deep fry the money, and then recirculate the crispy delicious money into the ecconomy. That’s what thfy mean by eat the rich. Deep fry their money, and eat their faces.

    …what? Whys everyone looking at me like that?

  • Aatube
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    72 months ago

    It’s just a different implementation of sales tax. Non-European countries in the Global North also have it, including the big one I shall not name, just sometimes under a different form and thus different name.

  • @Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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    72 months ago

    Just to make sure you know: Basically everyone has a VAT, except the US. It’s not some special EU thing.

    We have it in Switzerland, Canada has it, Japan has it, China has it, India has it, Russia has it, Brazil has it, Indonesia has it, Australia has it, Ukraine has it, Mexico has it, South Africa has it… I’m stopping here, but every country I googled had it so far.

  • DebatableRaccoon
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    72 months ago

    Because fuck the poor and working class. Don’t forget that they’re double dipping since income is often taken out of your earnings before you even get your money then every single purchase is taxed too.

    • The Octonaut
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      92 months ago

      No, not every purchase is taxed, and not every purchase that is is taxed at the same rate.

      These rates are set by individual countries (because “Europe”, lol) and can change year to year. For example Ireland doesn’t tax books, basic food staples, children’s clothes, medicines. Heating fuel is taxed but was set to a reduced rate during the cost of living crisis. Other countries will have different priorities.

      VAT ensures that even those who have a large amount of wealth accumulated without “income” also contribute to society.

    • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashedOP
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      62 months ago

      Don’t forget that they’re double dipping since income is often taken out of your earnings before you even get your money then every single purchase is taxed too.

      😭

      Because fuck the poor and working class.

      I thought EU was very progressive since they often have stuff (like healthcare) much better than the US. Is their “progressiveism” a myth? Am I over-estimating how progressive they are? 🤔

      • NoneOfUrBusiness
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        162 months ago

        The EU is one of the most progressive regions on Earth, if not the most. That said they’re definitely nowhere close to perfect, as seen from the encrypted messaging fiasco.

      • @Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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        2 months ago

        There’s another factor that nobody mentioned: the sales tax in EU countries is different for different products. This allows countries to incentive or disincentivize different classes of products by ramping the sales tax up or down. Higher tax on junk food, cigarettes and/or alcohol, low or nonexistent sales tax for basic ingredients and medicine.

        Interestingly, France and the Czech republic tax wine and beer respectively like basic food.

        • ERROR: Earth.exe has crashedOP
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          2 months ago

          Taxing at point of sale is a weird way to do it.

          A better way (in my opinion) is by income, the higher, the higher your tax rate.

          A VAT is essentially like a “flat tax” rate, that some politicians in the US are proposing.

          • @MurrayL@lemmy.world
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            42 months ago

            We do that too.

            Not sure about countries in the EU, but in the UK your income is taxed at different rates depending on how much you earn in a year.

      • @alcoholicorn@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        China also uses a VAT and they’re way more progressive than the EU. As far as I know it’s generally worse in both fairness (can’t be used to decrease inequality) and impact to productivity to income tax, but it’s much easier to administer.

      • DebatableRaccoon
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        12 months ago

        Depends how you look at it. Out of my wage, I lose ~50% after taxes and the healthcare system’s “fair share” and, depending on the country, the health system is so under-funded anyway that there’s a heavy incentive to give in and pay private if you want certain operations or some such done anytime in the foreseeable future.

    • @philluminati@lemmy.ml
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      32 months ago

      In what way does VAT hurt the poor more than the rich? Considering it’s on each item you buy it clearly impacts the rich more than the poor.

      • DebatableRaccoon
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        2 months ago

        Because VAT is proportional to the item, not the person’s income. From one perspective, yes it’s a fair system but from another, the cost of living is significantly greater for a poor person than a wealthy person. Many are barely scraping by while others are out wining and dining and still getting plenty for free.

        • @Apepollo11@lemmy.world
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          22 months ago

          I don’t understand what you mean “still getting plenty for free”.

          I agree that there shouldn’t be this kind of wealth inequality, and it’s madness that people are starving in countries that are so prosperous, but it’s a little disingenuous to ignore the fact that wealthier people pay more in tax. They’re not getting stuff for free, they’re getting stuff for more than it costs poorer people.

          • DebatableRaccoon
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            2 months ago

            The thing that comes to mind is Amazon being given brand new warehouses by governments in exchange for barely-humane working conditions. This means, the working stiff has payed for their ability to get a job. Company expansion should come out of that same company’s profit margin, not the back pocket of the working force.

            • @Apepollo11@lemmy.world
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              22 months ago

              Ah, ok. Sorry, I thought you were referring to well-off ‘ordinary’ people.

              Totally agree that the way governments fawn over corporations is beyond the pale.

              • DebatableRaccoon
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                12 months ago

                Understandable and it’s there that things get blurry. I don’t think anyone can argue that Amazon’s bottom line is Bezos but on paper Bezos doesn’t have any money because all of his monetary value is tied up in assets. A person with that much money simply ties everything to their company and suddenly they’re corporate assets instead of personal belongings, thus tax deductible (imagine the Spongebob rainbow meme here) along with the plethora of other advantages these people get just for being wealthy. Heck, this doesn’t even apply to only the insanely wealthy. With a smart accountant, it’s applicable to business owners.

                Some years ago I worked for a small company where the owner would declare all of his purchases as business assets. Some of those items would become “loss leaders” and simply “disappear” while others would get “rented” to himself at a “generous discount” until he chose to sell it. I got to learn just how perfectly legal it all was the hard way because by the time I was done at the company, I was looking for the biggest bus I could throw him under and it turned out there weren’t any. Made me want to puke.

          • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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            2 months ago

            Exactly. I get free healthcare like someone who’s being paid minimum wage (or an unemployed person who has registered as unemployed), but I also pay a significant amount in taxes and for most of my career, that has been money that comes from outside my own country and mostly outside the EU, as I’ve worked for software companies selling their products/services to foreign markets.

            Plenty of reason to hate me, but getting free stuff from the gvt isn’t one of them, I pay way more for it.

  • @philluminati@lemmy.ml
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    62 months ago

    Here in the Uk we have tax for services (council tax), tax for health care (national insurance), tax for all your income (income tax) and almost everything you buy includes a small tax called VAT (value added tax) which is about 20%. There’s also a few taxes on cigs, alcohol and petrol.

    VAT not on food, books but it on basically everything else. The more things you buy, the more tax you’ve paid. You more yoy spend on items the more you pay.

    I don’t know why people are calling it a tax on the poor. It’s obviously a tax on the biggest consumers.

  • Sockenklaus
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    42 months ago

    Yes, you’re correct: Poorer people spend most of not all of their available on income on everyday goods like groceries, clothes, etc…

    Richer people spend (relatively speaking!) less of their available income on these items and save me