Tex_21
Norm Smith Medallist
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2008
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- Landsborough
What a load of rubbish! A fair tax system will not have mcdonalds workers paying for other people's uni degrees.
At which point would you have the tax free threshold phase out under a "fair tax system"? Currently, it's just under $20k, which means unskilled workers, such as those at McDonalds, or checkouts or wherever, are paying taxes. Little back of the envelope calculation - Now, if that were lifted to a higher level, say $50k, with the median wage (the average is over $65, but taking the average is a bad move, it's skewed by mining industry wages and those paid to the very top) in Australia a little over $50k, we'll be conservative and say 45% of the labour force no longer pays tax. In a labour force of 12 million (again, slightly conservative, the real number is a little higher), that means 5.4 million workers no longer pay tax. Cool, but what does this mean for revenue? Assuming a normal distribution, the band from $20k-$50k would contain most of those 5.4m workers, let's say about 3.5m as an estimate. If 800,000 earn 20-30k, and pay on average about $2,500 in tax, 1.2m earn $30k-40k, paying around $6500 in average, and those left (1.5m) pay around $7500 on average, the loss in tax revenue amounts to over $21bn in lost revenue. Not huge in a budget approaching $400bn in nominal terms, but enough. Now, to make this shortfall up, I guess you would advocate higher MTRs at higher incomes (ignoring RJ's suggestion of a 100% tax rate above a certain threshold, as he has admitted it is not realistic. On topic, check out the Laffer curve, very relevant to the discussion), which seems reasonable enough. However what needs to be taken into account is these will have some detrimental effect on economic activity, and the question is how much?
The trick is, even if you implement these changes, higher taxes flow through to higher prices as well, meaning everyone pays indirectly. Free university education is regressive, that's simply the nature of it.
If the storm troopers for the rich would look at the situation with open eyes they would see the benefits of the wealth tax the OP is endorsing. I'm not talking about people on 6 figures per year, i'm talking about 7 - 10 figures.
RJ has admitted it is fanciful, and I'm certainly no "stormtrooper for the rich", I'm just an economist, I presented an option earlier if you want to do some form of 'soaking the rich' to generate revenue, better than implementing price controls (which it would amount to), which have never worked anyway for a sustained period of time.







