Tax Systems Flashcards
proportional tax
tax for which the percentage remains constant as income increases
proportional tax: burden
rich will pay more tax than poor in absolute terms but burden no greater on rich than on poor
regressive tax
tax that decreases in percentage as income increases
regressive tax: burden
greater burden on poor
progressive tax
tax for which the percentage paid in tax increases as income increases
progressive tax: burden
rich have more ability to pay taxes so bear greater burden - most equitable
graph for tax systems
arguments against progressive tax
- taxing higher incomes at higher rates creates disincentive to work
- punishes any increase in productivity or effort among nation’s workers
arguments for a progressive tax system
- higher rates only apply to marginal income rather than total income
- incentive to increase income by increasing productivity still there because increase in taxes will always be less than increase in income
- provides government with means of redistributing nation’s income
Laffer curve and explanation
government’s total tax receipts are maximised between 0% and 100%
at 100% tax rate no one would work so no tax revenue
total tax
Y*T
average tax
T/Y
marginal tax
- %tax on last £ earned unless give two years of tax:
- dT/dY
disposable income
disposable income = income - taxes
VAT tax type
- proportional
- regressive compared to income
- balance between progressive income tax and VAT