intermission
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However, cutting VAT will still be inflationary in the long run as the total price of goods/services is ultimately controlled by supply and demand.
Demand will raise the price to the level it was before, given that consumers were prepared to pay that price originally.
All cutting VAT does is temporarily skew the Retail Price Index, which is what we use to measure the rate of inflation.
And these people who commit VAT fraud are fully compliant with respect to all their other tax obligations? It is riskier committing VAT fraud as it either requires the complicity of the customer ("cash price") or leaving an external paper record that you charged VAT (in the form of an invoice or receipt) which can be used as evidence that you committed VAT fraud. Fiddling taxes which involve nobody but the fraudulant company and revenue is far more common. These "delboys" you refer to are likely to be fiddling far more income tax than VAT.I don't agree. There is a remarkable level of VAT fraud in this country, and indeed internationally - if you don't believe me, ask anyone who has ever paid cash for domestic service work. That's leaving aside the spectacular international VAT frauds that cost the UK government alone a number of Billions last year. The VAT system, as currently structured, creates an immediate and direct competitive advantage for tax-dodging businesses at the expense of compliant businesses. In certain sectors this advantage is so pronounced that the dellboys flourish while legitimate businesses find it difficult to survive.
Most people agree that progressive taxation is appropriate for income. Fewer would argue for progressive taxation on wealth - e.g. rates on property. But I've yet to hear an arguement for progressive taxation on consumption. Making VAT progressive would achieve nothing that couldn't be achieved with adjustments to income tax and would be impossible to collect. People pay VAT on what they spend from their take home pay - if you want higher earners to pay more you can take the money off them before they even get to the shop.Aren't forms of taxation which are unfairly incident on lower wage earners generally considered poor and inequitable?
Yes, the VAT cut would have a temporary effect on inflation.
No, it would have a temporary effect on the measure we use to observe inflation. You do not seem to be able to make the distinction between the two. When I am driving I cannot reduce speed by tampering with the speedometer.
Essentially dontaskme, you are looking to use our tax money to bribe retailers in the hope they will reduce prices. If we introduce this measure, in year's time, everyone will be standing around scratching their heads wondering why the retailers continued to charge what the customer was willing to pay.
Not necessarily to reduce prices, but to at least slow the level at which prices are increasing. But it would also be up to consumers to look for the lower prices and to spur competition.
As a customer I couldn't care less about how much of a good is VAT, what the running costs of the business are or if the owner of the business just had a good win on the horses.
If the business is operating in a competitive environment the price will already be set to what the market will bear. Where is the incentive for the retailer to pass on a reduction in VAT?
According to Wikipedia
"In mainstream economics, inflation is a rise in the general level of prices, as measured against some baseline of purchasing power. The prevailing view in mainstream economics is that inflation is caused by the interaction of the supply of money with output and interest rates."
But maybe, it would make it clearer to you if I said that reducing VAT would have a positive effect on price stability.
You are making the mistake of thinking inflation can be controlled by lowering the prices of goods and services. Inflation is an increase in the money supply (usually faciliitated by loose credit) which results in an erosion of the purchasing power of that money.
But if the consumer has extra money, where did it come from?In which case, as I have already pointed out cutting VAT will have the opposite effect. To stabilise prices during periods of inflation we need to take money out of the hands of the consumer. To do this, we need to increase taxes not reduce them.
This is what you said.
Now I'm asking you, what happens if prices of goods and services go down? Are you trying to say that has no effect on inflation?
I'm not saying the lowering of the prices controls inflation, however by lowering prices, inflation, by definition, goes down.
The definition is in terms of consumer prices, not in terms of the money supply.
But if the consumer has extra money, where did it come from?
From price reductions, where the VAT decrease has been passed on.
And, if the reductions are not passed on, the extra liquidity is in the pockets of businesses, who can use it for investment, not in the hands of the willing consumer.
High prices are not inflation they are the result of inflation. The only way to combat inflation is to reduce the money supply and tighten credit lending practices. Since we cannot set our own lending rates, the government should be looking to increase taxes rather than reduce them.
I think you're right on the first point. Under a strict gold standard mild price deflation is the norm due to rising productivity and rising population. Nothing wrong with that though.If the money supply were to double overnight, and the number of people in an economy doubled and the amount of goods and services available for sale doubled overnight as well, then prices would not go up.
Another example, if the money supply were to stay the same but there were sudden shortages of goods and services, then prices would go up. This is inflation.
I've thought about this and I don't buy it. You seem to say that inflation is an increase in the money supply rather than an increase in prices.
If the money supply were to double overnight, and the number of people in an economy doubled and the amount of goods and services available for sale doubled overnight as well, then prices would not go up.
If the money supply were to double overnight, and the number of people in an economy doubled and the amount of goods and services available for sale doubled overnight as well, then prices would not go up.
well, not according to my definition of inflation. The money supply has doubled but prices remain the same so inflation is 0%.If we double the number of people, double the money supply and double the amount of goods and services then nothing has really changed has it? We've just increased everything by a factor of 2.
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