View Full Version : VAT cut, will it make any difference?
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7747985.stm
in the UK a cut of VAT from 17.5% will reduce to 15% until the end of 2011 to encouraging buying, however i just don't think the cut is enough, 2.5% is pittance in my eyes, and it won't help in the long run, however it is a step in the right direction, any thoughts, encourage anyone here to buy more as christmas approaches?
HoreTore
11-28-2008, 18:01
15% is the minimum allowed by the EU btw, can't go below that.
Will it make a difference? No idea.
We should refuse to pay value added tax until someone tells us where all this added value is. :dizzy2:
LittleGrizzly
11-28-2008, 20:51
The only goods i buy with VAT on them are cigerettes and coca cola anyway, i usually get whatever i can afford so it wouldn't really encourage me to spend more as i spend already...
i have had a £500 voucher to get a replacement pc from my insurance for like 4-5 months, so it means i can squeeze some extra value out of that
the added value is the increase of the value of the good
Crazed Rabbit
11-28-2008, 21:06
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7747985.stm
in the UK a cut of VAT from 17.5% will reduce to 15% until the end of 2011 to encouraging buying, however i just don't think the cut is enough, 2.5% is pittance in my eyes, and it won't help in the long run, however it is a step in the right direction, any thoughts, encourage anyone here to buy more as christmas approaches?
Yes, probably. How big of an effect? Well, the size of the cut (smallish) and the current economic situation make me think the improvement won't be that big.
15% is the minimum allowed by the EU btw, can't go below that.
Really? Wow. How does that all work?
CR
HoreTore
11-28-2008, 22:06
Really? Wow. How does that all work?
The EU is a union based on a bunch of laws on trade and commerce. By joining, you agree to follow them. Kinda fundamental...
CountArach
11-28-2008, 22:32
15% is the minimum allowed by the EU btw, can't go below that.
That truly surprises me.
and me, i was completely un ware though that wouldnt stop them reducing taxes would it :clown:
Crazed Rabbit
11-28-2008, 23:37
The EU is a union based on a bunch of laws on trade and commerce. By joining, you agree to follow them. Kinda fundamental...
Most trade unions I've heard of have maximum standards on trade restrictions, like tariffs, not minimum requirements for taxes.
The idea of a union like that making laws to protect high-tax countries is odd.
CR
Hosakawa Tito
11-28-2008, 23:53
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v517/hoppy84/tomtoles1.jpg
sorry i dont quite get that, explain please :help:
Louis VI the Fat
11-29-2008, 00:06
Most trade unions I've heard of have maximum standards on trade restrictions, like tariffs, not minimum requirements for taxes.The EU is not a trade union. It is an economic union.
As a capitalist bloc, the EU seeks to harmonise taxes. Because, in order to get a fully functioning market, it is essential to have as little government intervention as possible. By setting minimum and maximum VAT rates, governments can't aid the competitiveness of their businesses with taxes as instruments.
If it were up to me, the EU would set a single fixed rate for the entire union so the market can function undistorted by government interventions altogether.
A second issue is, that most businesses aren't national anymore, but multinational. Companies will play governments against each other for lower taxes. This is the world turned upside down. The idea is that businesses compete with one another, instead of seeking out government hand-outs and incentives. The EU, being a union of small to mid-sized states, protects these states and their consumers against large multinational corporations, and forces them to compete with each other.
The idea of a union like that making laws to protect high-tax countries is odd.As always, people tend to forget that the EU sets a maximum tax rate as well.
I, for one, applaud the UK's socialist measure of lowering VAT. VAT is a regressive tax. I do wish the minumum and maximum VAT rates were set lower so that Britain could lead the EU on to an even more socialist tax regime.
Market capitalism, undistorted by governmental incentives, combined with progressive tax regimes make for splendid countries.
Hosakawa Tito
11-29-2008, 00:40
sorry i dont quite get that, explain please :help:
What the cartoon depicts is the disconnect between economic policy makers *elected & appointed* and the common family. On the one hand you have the "deciders" with secure jobs, health care, pensions, homes, college educations for their kids, every perk imaginable...saying things like this idiot (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/11/us/politics/11campaign.html) . On the other are the vast majority that are losing or lost their jobs, homes in foreclosure, the stability & security of their families futures in serious doubt.
I think it will help, better than doing nothing.
I would have prefered direct tax help for lower income groups, but I understand the VAT cut - they are trying to stimulate the economy and more than anythign send a message rather than anything else.
rasoforos
11-29-2008, 08:09
Well it WILL help because it increases the disposable income on the demand side on the economy
Something that was not mentioned is that it will also help in the supply side of the economy since businesses will have to pay less taxes to the tax office (and since you pay that tax cash while u might get your money in months it will help them). On their side 2.5% out of 17% is about 15%.
Conserning Hosakawa Tito's cartoon. The sad truth is that there is a conflict of interest. Economic theory suggests that to come out of an economic crisis you gotta encourage people to not drop their spending levels. The governments encourage that by increasing disposable income so the people have money to spend. However, on the supply side, the people would rather use the money to obtain some security for the future (its harder to think about buying a new plasma TV when you might lose your job next month). and 'keep it under the mattress' which, economically speakng is the 'selfish thing to do'.
Another question I saw was 'What the Value added is'
Well to put it simply the VAT is a way for a government to collect taxes without having to do much.
What is taxed is the profit added on each stage of a product's manufacture until it reaches the consumer. It is a producer tax, the consumer is not really taxed.
Lets say VAT IS 20%
i) For example lets say I am manufacturing wooden chairs. I go and buy my wood and my glue and my cloth etc and they are worth 100 euros. My supplier will charge me ( 100+20% VAT) 120 euros. He pays 20 euros to the government.
ii) Now I manufactured my chairs and Nick who owns a furniture store comes to buy them from me. I charge him 140 euros + VAT (140 + 140*0,2) for a total 168 euros. The current VAT is 140*20% = 28 euros but the manufacturer has already paid the 20 euros so I pay 28-20 8 euros to the tax office.
iii) Now Nick puts the chair on display and an Org moderator comes to buy a chair because his old one melt away because he was sitting on it all day reading the forum. Nick decides to sell the chair for 180 euros + VAT for a total of 216 euros. The current VAT is 180*20% = 36 euros but my supplier has allready paid 20 euros and I paid 8 so he has to give 36-20-8= 8 euros
iv) The org moderator enjoys his new chair he bought for 216. If there was no tax he d have paid 180 euros (the price nick is willing to sell the chair if there wasn't VAT). Now as he can see the 36 extra euros can be traced back to the 20 euros my supplier paid and the 8 euros I paid and the 8 euros Nick paid. We were all taxed for the value we added and the government took the money.
Now here is the tricky part!
To the untrained eye it appears that the moderator paid all the tax since he is charged 36 euros extra. Due to the magic of economics that is not the case! Why?!?! you ll scream!
Because VAT rises the overall price level by the amount equal to VAT. Money have the value we perceive them to have (In reality they are worthless pieces of paper with no valuable assets to back them up. The idea that there is a huge vault full of gold somewhere to back up every single dollar out there is a myth). So since the overall price level of the economy was increased , there is no difference for the economically challenged moderator.
Its is sort of the same as to say that we double the price of all products in the market but we also double wages. There is no difference if you make 1000 euros and a TV costs 500 to purchase and tomorrow your wage is double and the price of the TV is doubled too. Your ability to purchase things is not affected.
Mangudai
12-06-2008, 03:33
Well it WILL help because it increases the disposable income on the demand side on the economy
Something that was not mentioned is that it will also help in the supply side of the economy since businesses will have to pay less taxes to the tax office (and since you pay that tax cash while u might get your money in months it will help them). On their side 2.5% out of 17% is about 15%.
Conserning Hosakawa Tito's cartoon. The sad truth is that there is a conflict of interest. Economic theory suggests that to come out of an economic crisis you gotta encourage people to not drop their spending levels. The governments encourage that by increasing disposable income so the people have money to spend. However, on the supply side, the people would rather use the money to obtain some security for the future (its harder to think about buying a new plasma TV when you might lose your job next month). and 'keep it under the mattress' which, economically speakng is the 'selfish thing to do'.
Another question I saw was 'What the Value added is'
Well to put it simply the VAT is a way for a government to collect taxes without having to do much.
What is taxed is the profit added on each stage of a product's manufacture until it reaches the consumer. It is a producer tax, the consumer is not really taxed.
Lets say VAT IS 20%
i) For example lets say I am manufacturing wooden chairs. I go and buy my wood and my glue and my cloth etc and they are worth 100 euros. My supplier will charge me ( 100+20% VAT) 120 euros. He pays 20 euros to the government.
ii) Now I manufactured my chairs and Nick who owns a furniture store comes to buy them from me. I charge him 140 euros + VAT (140 + 140*0,2) for a total 168 euros. The current VAT is 140*20% = 28 euros but the manufacturer has already paid the 20 euros so I pay 28-20 8 euros to the tax office.
iii) Now Nick puts the chair on display and an Org moderator comes to buy a chair because his old one melt away because he was sitting on it all day reading the forum. Nick decides to sell the chair for 180 euros + VAT for a total of 216 euros. The current VAT is 180*20% = 36 euros but my supplier has allready paid 20 euros and I paid 8 so he has to give 36-20-8= 8 euros
iv) The org moderator enjoys his new chair he bought for 216. If there was no tax he d have paid 180 euros (the price nick is willing to sell the chair if there wasn't VAT). Now as he can see the 36 extra euros can be traced back to the 20 euros my supplier paid and the 8 euros I paid and the 8 euros Nick paid. We were all taxed for the value we added and the government took the money.
Now here is the tricky part!
To the untrained eye it appears that the moderator paid all the tax since he is charged 36 euros extra. Due to the magic of economics that is not the case! Why?!?! you ll scream!
Because VAT rises the overall price level by the amount equal to VAT. Money have the value we perceive them to have (In reality they are worthless pieces of paper with no valuable assets to back them up. The idea that there is a huge vault full of gold somewhere to back up every single dollar out there is a myth). So since the overall price level of the economy was increased , there is no difference for the economically challenged moderator.
Its is sort of the same as to say that we double the price of all products in the market but we also double wages. There is no difference if you make 1000 euros and a TV costs 500 to purchase and tomorrow your wage is double and the price of the TV is doubled too. Your ability to purchase things is not affected.
:daisy:!
Your last two paragraphs argue that it imposes no real burden on taxpayers. If that were the case it would grant no real benefit to the government. But it is not the case. The end consumer really does pay the full tax. And the money represents real credit on human labor and everything else money can buy.
VAT taxes and sales taxes are the most economically inefficient taxes. All they do is deter transactions. The cornerstone of efficient markets is that goods flow to the allocations where they are most highly valued.
To run with your furniture example. The chair maker could buy sawlogs or he could buy milled lumber. The chair maker has the ability to mill his own logs, but he is 10% less efficient than the person who runs a sawmill.
Lets say sawlogs cost $100
Milling costs $20 +$4 tax.
Doing it himself costs $22
So the chair maker saves money by doing it himself. If his competitor is otherwise identical, but the competitor outsources milling to the most efficient contractor, then our chair maker can beat the competitior on final price to the consumer.
King Jan III Sobieski
12-06-2008, 03:47
I'm unemployed and live in the U.S.... so, I had to vote "gah"
Its is sort of the same as to say that we double the price of all products in the market but we also double wages. There is no difference if you make 1000 euros and a TV costs 500 to purchase and tomorrow your wage is double and the price of the TV is doubled too. Your ability to purchase things is not affected.
Right, and that is why there is not much of a difference in anything because if the government gets les VAT they will have less money and stop renewing streets and let the people pay for that themselves for example so in the end somehow you pay for that anyway, everytime someone earns more, someone else will either earn less, pay more or have a higher debt and it never ever ends anyway unless you apply some kind of full communism and make everybody exactly the same in which case people lose all incentive to be good or so I hear.
You know when someone takes a mortgage from a bank he will have to pay back more and that is what the bank earns so overall he is poorer, the bank richer and the one who builds the house is richer as well, if he saved the money up front the bank would earn nothing(possibly pay him interest and thus be poorer unless they loan his money to someone else who then pays interest and is then poorer), he would not be any poorer as in the first example and the one building the house would earn exactly the same, now in the first example the guy is complaining how the interest on his mortgage is crippling him and in the second example someone else is complaining how the interest on the mortgage the bank gave him from the first guy's money is crippling him or the bank would be complaining how they do not make money because noone is taking mortgages.
The same applies to wages and prices, everything you get more in wages will be relayed by you company to the customers who will have to pay more but you company will want to make more money to satisfy the shareholders so they raise prices a bit more or try to seel to more people so more people will have less money to buy other things and will demand higher wages because everything is so expensive, then their respecitve employers will raise prices to afford the higher wages and add a bit to satisfy shareholders and then people complain everything has become more expensive and demand higher wages because... and so it goes on and on. I'm not really impressed by any "solution" to all this because it always comes out the same anyway. :dizzy2:
Mangudai
12-07-2008, 03:42
The taxes have a real impact, and the way the taxes are levied can distort the way society operates.
In my view the most fair taxes are property taxes on real estate, and taxes on natural resources.
Income taxes are moderately fair.
VAT and sales taxes are the most unfair and cause the most interference with positive economic behavior.
You guys are getting hung up on the intrinsic nature of money. Money is credit to other people. It always has been. Precious metals were never the essence of money, though they have been closely linked for a long time and many people confuse them. It would be helpful to think for a few moments about the difference between a barter economy vs. a token economy...
Now lets talk about taxes... In the early middle ages money existed, but the monetary system was dysfunctional. The common peasant seldom got coins and could not monetize all aspects of economic life. Peasants paid taxes directly to their lord in the form of labor. In Western Europe, most peasants had 5 days for themselves, 1 day to serve the landlord, and 1 day of rest each week. This amounts to a 20% tax on their labor, very similar to what we have today. Peasants are good at construction and farming, but their are many things they can't do. Our system of monetary taxes is better inasmuch as a token economy is better than barter, the government can get almost anything it wants not just what the taxpayer has to offer.
In the Middle Ages property ownership was closely linked to military service. This system worked without money. Our system based on money offers the government greater flexibility, but is roughly the same in terms of the burden on society.
Then and now the government makes a direct claim on the natural resources of the country and the labor of its citizens. Making the claims through money gives the system flexibility.
Evil_Maniac From Mars
12-07-2008, 04:32
Dan Hannan. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCYukD-unfo)
Alexander the Pretty Good
12-07-2008, 05:14
More surprising than the mere existence of a uniform VAT to me is that the minimum is set so high...
HoreTore
12-07-2008, 08:30
More surprising than the mere existence of a uniform VAT to me is that the minimum is set so high...
It was set according to the level of each country at the time they introduced it.'
And no, the reason for it is NOT to "keep taxes high" or whatever. It's one of a number of things in place to prevent individual countries to play with their economies, and by that reducing the economic stability of of the EU. As Louis said, ideally it wouldn't be a min/max, it would be a set rate by the EU that individual countries cannot change. We live together, we trade together, we tax together.
Oh, and on topic:
SSB, the main statistics agency here, said yesterday that even a tax cut of 19 billion NOK(by comparison, our defence budget is 30 billion NOK) wouldn't create more than around 2500 more jobs. We wouldn't spend the extra money, we would put it in the bank. So take that, tax-cut whores! Bring on the socialism!
Tribesman
12-07-2008, 09:46
VAT cut, will it make any difference?
One measure would be to ask shopkeepers in the six counties how much their trade has increased since the cut , but that angle might be more suitable in a topic about uniform VAT throughout the Union .
Mangudai
12-07-2008, 23:33
More surprising than the mere existence of a uniform VAT to me is that the minimum is set so high...
More proof that VAT distorts economic behavior. The EU higher ups know that a country with low VAT has a competitive advantage.
Louis VI the Fat
12-11-2008, 18:19
After getting a taste of it this morning, I am now very impressed by the firmness of Britain's balls. Very tough, will resist any amount of outside pressure, but still very responsive. Every continental should wish he had even one of them.
In a breach of diplomatic standards, Germany's finance minister Steinbrueck criticised the UK's decision to cut VAT (http://www.reuters.com/article/bondsNews/idUSHKG6119020081211) and raise national debt levels.
Cracks emerged in the global effort to drag the world out of recession on Thursday with Germany attacking Britain ahead of an EU summit for rushing into debt to bail out industries and pump up growth.
In a move that suggested trouble ahead for concerted European and perhaps world efforts to end the financial crisis and restore global economic growth, Germany criticised countries for rushing into untested economic rescue packages.
Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck urged governments to pause before pledging to spend billions of dollars to try to push their economies out of trouble."The speed at which proposals are put together under pressure that don't even pass an economic test is breathtaking and depressing," he said in an interview with Newsweek magazine, published on the magazine's website on Wednesday.
He singled out British Prime Minister Gordon Brown for particular criticism, accusing him of switching to economic policies that would saddle a generation with debt. "The switch from decades of supply-side politics all the way to a crass Keynesianism is breathtaking," he said.
Another German policymaker, European Central Bank Executive Board member Juergen Stark, also indicated concerns about responses to the crisis, saying on Wednesday that the ECB does not have a lot of room for manoeuvre after its interest rate cut last week. The comments came as European Union leaders were to meet in Brussels to discuss a 200-billion euro ($260-billion) stimulus package to wrench the bloc out of recession.
However, and not for the first time in modern history, Britain's balls proved to be much sturdier than the Germans expected. (http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/video/Ed-Balls-Talks-About-German-Finance-Minister-And-World-Economy/Video/200812215177132?lpos=Politics_1&lid=VIDEO_1722785_PM+'Crass'+Label+Dismissed&videoCategory=Politics)
Schools Secretary Ed Balls hit back, suggesting the comments had more to do with Germany's internal politics in its ruling coalition than the nature of the global response to the economic downturn.
Mr Steinbruck is a member of the Social Democratic Party which shares power with Angela Merkel's rival Christian Democrats.
Mr Balls said Mr Steinbruck was known for his "strong and robust views" but he defended the UK's course of action in cutting taxes and raising borrowing, saying it had widespread support across the world.
"It is the right thing to do to act now to keep jobs, to keep people in their homes and to keep the economy moving," he told Sky News. "We need to save the world from a deeper downturn and we will only do that by concerted international action together. Britain, and Gordon Brown, is leading that action."
On the eve of an EU summit, a row between Germany and the UK is not really what we need.
Apart from that, I think I must side with Brown's handling of th crisis.
Incongruous
12-12-2008, 02:09
Dan Hannan. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QCYukD-unfo)
Bloody hell, that man can speak can't he?
Evil_Maniac From Mars
12-12-2008, 02:27
Bloody hell, that man can speak can't he?
He is even better than Nigel Farage, in my opinion - and Farage is good.
I mean... (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdNa4ECIPuY)
...isn't it great? (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ceejnrM858k)
Louis VI the Fat
12-12-2008, 02:42
...isn't it great? (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ceejnrM858k)No, no it isn't. It isn't great at all.
It is not great for a member of parliament to compare a constitutional reform proposal with Germany's 1933 Ermächtigungsgesetz Act that gave Adolf Hitler unlimited power.
It is, instead, an outrageous insult to both the man in front of him, EP's German president Hans-Gert Poettering, and to the victims of Hitler. And it makes a complete mockery of the dignity of the EP.
What an utter buffoon.
Praise to that British MEP that demanded he step outside with him - there's a proper British conservative for you. :2thumbsup:
Incongruous
12-12-2008, 03:03
Indeed, but I find that other fellow quite good.
Actually, just saw that Question time with Farrage, what a laugh.
Evil_Maniac From Mars
12-12-2008, 03:04
It is not great for a member of parliament to compare a constitutional reform proposal with Germany's 1933 Ermächtigungsgesetz Act that gave Adolf Hitler unlimited power.
I don't think he was comparing the Lisbon Treaty to the Ermächtigungsgesetz (Ermächtigungsgesetz Act is, I think, redundant ~;) ), but to another piece of legislation.
By the letter of history, he was incorrect, but as an analogy or a comparison, the validity of the statement can be debated. For example, if he believes that the text of the document in question gave arbitrary, unlawful, and undemocratic power to the chair, he has every right to draw comparison to the Ermächtigungsgesetz. An extreme analogy, to be sure, but not necessarily a bad one.
What an utter buffoon.
Only to a pro-Treaty person. Martin Schulz, now that is a buffoon.
After getting a taste of it this morning, I am now very impressed by the firmness of Britain's balls. Very tough, will resist any amount of outside pressure, but still very responsive. Every continental should wish he had even one of them.
In a breach of diplomatic standards, Germany's finance minister Steinbrueck criticised the UK's decision to cut VAT (http://www.reuters.com/article/bondsNews/idUSHKG6119020081211) and raise national debt levels.
However, and not for the first time in modern history, Britain's balls proved to be much sturdier than the Germans expected. (http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/video/Ed-Balls-Talks-About-German-Finance-Minister-And-World-Economy/Video/200812215177132?lpos=Politics_1&lid=VIDEO_1722785_PM+'Crass'+Label+Dismissed&videoCategory=Politics)
On the eve of an EU summit, a row between Germany and the UK is not really what we need.
Apart from that, I think I must side with Brown's handling of th crisis.
Bunch of rubbish, if the guy was true to his name he wouldn't be afraid to let some companies fail, real men with balls do not need homes, they live in caves.
Steinbrück seems to handle this crisis very well IMO, he doesn't give bailouts to every shmuck who cannot manage a company and when he does, he may just tie them to certain restrictions, just like it should be. Like I've said before, managers get paid for their responsibility, if they do not want to be responsible they should get less money.
All these measures just fuel the recession anyway because people will think "Oh noes, the government is heavily responding, it must be really, really bad, let's stop investing and save some money(that will be worthless in a superinflation anyway)". We're all doomed if we go on like that, those high-payed managers should drag their companies out of the dirt themselves if they can, if they can't, we do not need their services anymore, that's a similar standard to the one they apply when hiring people.
vBulletin® v3.7.1, Copyright ©2000-2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.