F
fakename
Guest
user "essie777":
There’s something interesting about taxes from an economic point of view: they mostly seem to perform the opposite function of prices since rich dudes pay more than poor ones (according to absolute numbers if the tax is flat or according to the progressive structure of the tax). In a market, prices can be greater for poor people and they can be (metaphorically) lowered w/a rise in pay. In this way prices respond to the opinions of buyers and sellers more than taxes, and in that way, prices don’t have to take a sum or a proportion from each and every person in the country. So in this way, a price can be less costly in the aggregate than a tax.
generally prices respond to opinions better than democracy.
fascinating.I suggest that in an non welfare state the cost of buying just one of these protections is more than the tax an average person would pay each year.
There’s something interesting about taxes from an economic point of view: they mostly seem to perform the opposite function of prices since rich dudes pay more than poor ones (according to absolute numbers if the tax is flat or according to the progressive structure of the tax). In a market, prices can be greater for poor people and they can be (metaphorically) lowered w/a rise in pay. In this way prices respond to the opinions of buyers and sellers more than taxes, and in that way, prices don’t have to take a sum or a proportion from each and every person in the country. So in this way, a price can be less costly in the aggregate than a tax.
generally prices respond to opinions better than democracy.