3. •Aims of Taxes & Fees
•Taxes vs. Fees (and Excises)
•Direct vs. Indirect Collections
•Progressive, Regressive, Proportional, and
Digressive Systems
•Marginal vs. Effective Rates
•(Mis)Interpretations and (Mis)Understandings
•Quiz
Looking Ahead
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4. •No two jurisdictions across the world have
the same tax rules
•Even in the USA, 50 states, plus Federal
Law, all are different
Note – Diverse Laws!
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5. Aims of Taxes & Fees
•What are the objectives of any tax or fee?
What is the objective of this particular
collection?
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6. Aims of Taxes & Fees
1. Generate Revenue
a) General purpose revenues
b) Specific purpose revenues
2. Encourage/Discourage Specific Behavior
3. Promote Equity
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7. 1. Generate Revenue
a) General purpose revenues
b) Specific purpose revenues
Military, Education, Roads,
Public Health, Pensions,
Debt payments. …
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8. 2. Discourage Specific Behavior
http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/leisure/2015/05/24/smokers-more-likely-to-t
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10. Equality vs. Equity
Image: Interaction Institute for Social Change | Artist: Angus Maguire.
http://interactioninstitute.org/ and http://madewithangus.com/ 10
11. How much Equity?
•Gini Co-efficient a major concern?
•Envy of the “too rich”?
•Concern about the poor?
•Incentives to work hard
•Socio-economic “Safety-net”
•Socialist perspectives
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12. Taxes vs. Fees (and Excises)
•Taxes are paid for government services that
should help everyone
We all benefit, directly or indirectly
oSchools, Safety, Health…
•Fees are paid for government services that
directly serve that particular person
The fee (amount) should be directly tied to the
cost of maintaining the service
oSwimming pool entrance, Parking garage
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13. Excises
•Excises are a special type of tax,
something closer to a “fee”
•Not all countries agree on the definition
•Often defined through a list created by
legislation(s)
•Fixed rate by quantity, not by price
•Usually included in the basic price at
purchase
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15. Excises
•in the USA …
an indirect tax on listed items
by federal, state and local governments
not uniform throughout the United States
collected from the producer or retailer
not paid directly by the consumer
“hidden" in the price
maybe explains appeal to many politicians?
But sometimes a tax is called “an excise tax”
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16. Sample Excises
•In the USA
• Tobacco
• Alcohol
• Gasoline
• Guns & ammunition
• Luxury automobiles
• Minerals/Oils (mining)
• Gambling (where it is
lawful)
• Illegal drugs (?!?!?!?)
•In the UK (historic)
• Stamp Tax
(printed materials)
• Window Tax
(the number of
windows as a
visible sign of
wealth, not easily
hidden) – is this
really an excise?
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17. More details on tax types
•Ad valorum tax - % of product value
•Specific tax - per unit, e.g., petroleum, wine
•Sales tax – applies only at end of process
(final sale)
•GST – sales tax that applies to both goods
and services
•VAT – applies at every level of process
(taxed each time value is added)
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18. Direct vs. Indirect Collections
•Direct – payment direct from people (tax-
payer) to government
•Indirect – payment to government made
through an intermediary
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19. Direct vs. Indirect Collections
Direct to Government
Indirect via Intermediary
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20. (Dis)Advantages of
Indirect Collections
Advantages
•Poor exempted from paying direct taxes
•Convenient to taxpayer & the state
•Can be spread over a wide range of
products/services
•Easy to collect when goods bought & sold
•Elastic in yield
•Equitable
•Curb consumption of harmful commodities
Disadvantages
•Not equitable
•Discourages industry if
raw goods are taxed
•Uneconomical
•Does not develop
civic-mindedness
•Difficulty in tracking
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23. photo credit: Wai Linn Kyaw/Myanmar Business Today
http://www.mmbiztoday.com/articles/ird-revenue-stamp-crackdown-imminent 23
24. Progressive, Regressive,
Proportional and Digressive Systems
•Progressive taxes are based on a
progressive or increasing tax rate schedule
the more you earn, the higher the tax rate
•Regressive taxes have a greater impact
on low-income individuals or entities than
high-income earners
Low income earners feel like they pay more
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25. Progressive, Regressive,
Proportional and Digressive Systems
•Proportional taxes (aka "flat tax") impacts
low-, middle- and high-income earners
relatively equally
•Digressive tax is just a “flatter” version of a
progressive tax – it stops “progressing”
earlier (lower) and might start at a higher
rate than a “pure” progressive system
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30. Progressive, Regressive,
Proportional Taxes in Application
•Progressive Tax (or Digressive?)
• Income Tax
•Regressive Tax
• “Sin Taxes” (cigarettes, alcohol – excises)
•Proportional Tax
• Sales tax (in application, but reality?)
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31. Actual Effects
•Governments generally describe tax systems
according to marginal tax rates
•Citizens generally consider taxes to be “fair” or
unfair based on effect
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32. Marginal vs. Effective Rates
•Marginal Rates indicate tax on additional
amounts
•Banded Rates describe tax for total amount
within a range
•Effective Rates are the “actual” amount after
discounts (deductions, waivers, etc.)
compared to actual income (or value)
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33. Examples
•The marginal tax rate is the percentage of
tax applied to your income for each tax
bracket (band) you qualify for.
•The effective tax rate is the final calculated
amount compared to your total income (or
value)
•Let’s look at USA Federal Income Tax 2016
and a “Mr. John Smith.”
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34. Marginal Tax Example
Marginal Tax Rates 2016
US Federal Income Tax
10% Bracket: $0 to $9,275
15% Bracket: $9,275 - $37,650
25% Bracket: $37,650 - $91,150
28% Bracket: $91,150 - $190,150
33% Bracket: $190,150 - $413,350
35% Bracket: $413,350 - $415,050
39.6% Bracket: $415,050+
(the marginal tax rates are Progressive)
Sample Case – John Smith
$120,000 in income
($9,275 - $0) x 10% = $927.50
($37,650 - $9,275) x 15% = $4,256.25
($91,150 - $37,650) x 25% = $13,375
($120,000 - $91,150) x 28% = $8,078
Not applicable
Not applicable
Not applicable
TOTAL: $26,636.75
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35. Effective Tax Example
Joe Smith’s initial compiled tax rate is
$26,636.75 / $120,000 = 22.2%
But …
•Deductions
Single or Married? Children?
Owns a home with a mortgage?
Health expenses?
•Other legal loopholes
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36. Marginal Tax Example #2
Sample Case 2 – James Jones
$90,000 in income
($9,275 - $0) x 10% = $927.50
($37,650 - $9,275) x 15% = $4,256.25
($90,000 - $37,650) x 25% = $13,087.50
Not applicable
Not applicable
Not applicable
Not applicable
TOTAL: $18,541.25
Sample Case 1 – John Smith
$120,000 in income
($9,275 - $0) x 10% = $927.50
($37,650 - $9,275) x 15% = $4,256.25
($91,150 - $37,650) x 25% = $13,375
($120,000 - $91,150) x 28% = $8,078
Not applicable
Not applicable
Not applicable
TOTAL: $26,636.75
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37. Effective Tax Example 2
Joe Smith’s initial compiled tax rate is
$35,036.75 / $120,000 = 22.2%
And …
John Jones’ initial compiled tax rate is
$18,541.25 / $90,000 = 20.6%
But Remember,
deductions reduce your taxable income
the rich have more deductions
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38. Mis(Interpretations &
(Mis)Understandings
1. There are many kinds of taxes that
individuals pay.
• typical worker has 6 or 7 “withholdings” in a
single paycheck
1. Tax structure is not based on lifestyle
• Example: Cigarettes
1. Tax Loopholes (deductions & exemptions)
• Example: Buffett & Trump
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39. Cigarettes Tax Example
Smoker #2 – Bill Green
$4,000/month income
1 week : $10
4 weeks : $40
1% of monthly income
Smoker #1 – Bob White
$1,000/month income
1 week: $10
4 weeks : $40
4% of monthly income
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•Let’s say a pack of cigarettes cost $5
•Our model smokers buy 2 packs per week
40. “The Buffett Rule”
•Warren Buffett noted that his secretary paid
more taxes than he did.
•Donald Trump took a $916 million tax write-
off “carry-forward,” and therefore “paid no
taxes” for a number of years.
•President Obama proposed “The Buffett
Rule”-- those who earn more than $1million
have a mandatory 30% minimum tax.
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41. Sliding Fees Scales
•Is it fair to charge everyone the same fee,
regardless of their income or assets?
•Should we consider the size of the family
when we consider the fee?
•What about “other assets”
• Money in the bank
• Home ownership
• Automobile
• Other
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