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  • Hi I'm Adriene Hill, this is Crash Course Economics, and today we're going to talk about taxes.

  • We're going to talk about why we have taxes, what they do for us,

  • and why you should go ahead and take that raise that's going to bump you into the next tax bracket.

  • Also rebellions. And the British Empire's bad judgement when it came to taxing colonies.

  • [Theme Music]

  • While your struggles with taxes and the tax code may seem particularly unpleasant to you today,

  • people have been paying, and complaining, about taxes for a long time.

  • Way longer than any of us have been alive. Or our parents. Or our grandparents.

  • Ancient Mesopotamians paid taxes in the form of livestock and labor.

  • There are ancient Egyptians texts and tomb scenes showing evidence of taxes, tax collectors, and even tax shelters.

  • Taxation and tax collectors also show up in Bibleover and over.

  • Taxes appear in scripture as a necessity, like: "Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's"

  • And tax collectors are in there as sinners, right up with prostitutes.

  • More recently, in 1927, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote:

  • Taxes are what we pay for civilized society.”

  • Maybe it's time we forgive tax collectors too

  • So we've had taxes pretty much as long as we've had records of organized society.

  • But why? What are the goals of taxation?

  • At the most basic level, taxes raise money for government services.

  • Taxes are used to promote the well-being of societyat least well-being as defined by the government in power.

  • They help us afford services markets might not pay for on their own.

  • Things like public safety and national defense and education.

  • Taxes can be used to protect the environment.

  • They can help a country implement fiscal and monetary policies, meant to push along economic growth.

  • Taxes can be used as a way to redistribute wealth in a society

  • from people who have more to people who have less.

  • This can happen in a couple of wayssome more direct than others.

  • An income tax system that taxes high income earners at a higher rate than low income earners is one example.

  • And we'll come back to that.

  • Government subsidies and voucherslike food stamps and housing programs also shift wealth.

  • So do luxury taxesbasically an additional tax bill on expensive items like jet planes, expensive furs

  • and that really annoying diamond ring space on the Monopoly board.

  • Governments can also use taxes to TRY to change people's behavior.

  • Sin taxes on not-good-for-you products like cigarettes and alcohol are meant to reduce

  • consumption of unhealthy products.

  • Gasoline taxes are meant to encourage people to drive less.

  • France passed soda taxes, to try to get people to drink fewer sugary drinks.

  • Denmark passed, and then got rid of, a "fat tax" on foods that were relatively high in saturated fat.

  • A handful of governments, including those in British Columbia, Ireland, & Chile have instituted "carbon taxes."

  • These carbon taxes basically charge businesses and sometimes households for the amount of

  • polluting greenhouse gases they use or create.

  • These carbon taxes take different forms around the world.

  • Residents of British Columbia, for example, pay an extra 6.67 cents per liter of gasoline as a carbon tax.

  • For those of us in the US, Myanmar, and Liberia who don't use the metric system, that's about $0.25/gallon.

  • In Chile, power plant operators pay $5 for every metric ton of carbon dioxide that they release into the air.

  • When economists talk about taxes, they sometimes divide them into direct taxes and indirect taxes.

  • Direct taxes are paid by a person or organization to the government body that imposed the taxes.

  • These include property taxes and income taxeswhere there's no intermediaryand

  • I can't pass off the tax burden to someone else.

  • Value added taxes and sales taxes aren't exactly the same thing, but they're both good examples of indirect tax.

  • They're collected by a store or seller or producer of goods, but are actually paid by consumers.

  • They're taxes that ALL consumers have to pay, regardless of how much money they make.

  • A pair of socks at the mall down the street is going to cost me exactly the same as when

  • a billionaire buys that pair of socks at the same store.

  • Some economists say indirect taxes distort market prices, and lead to one of the things

  • most dreaded by economists, the Voldemort of economic outcomes: inefficiency.

  • Economists also characterize taxes as regressive, progressive and proportional.

  • Let's start with regressive taxes. Regressive taxes are typically applied across the board

  • and, on their face, they might seem equitable, because everyone pays the same amount.

  • But regressive taxes take a higher toll on people with lower-income than high-income earners.

  • Sales taxes, especially on essential items, are considered regressive.

  • That's why some places exempt food and prescription drug purchases from sales taxes.

  • Some economists argue that fees for things like hunting licenses, toll roads, and driver's

  • licenses are also regressive. Why?

  • Well, imagine two drivers go to the department of motor vehicles to get a new license.

  • One makes $200,000 a year, the other makes $20,000.

  • Both will pay exactly the same amount for their driver's license.

  • The license fee is a much bigger hit for the lower-income driver.

  • And that's why regressive tax takes a disproportionate toll on people with lower incomes.

  • On the other end of the taxing spectrum, there are progressive taxes.

  • Progressive taxes are more or less the opposite of regressive taxes

  • in that they shift the burden of taxation to people who make more money, and away from those who make less.

  • In the United States, our income tax is a progressive tax, meaning individual's pay

  • more in taxes as they make more income.

  • But before you start worrying about whether making an extra $100 this year is going to

  • bump you into a higher tax bracket

  • it's worth understanding how the progressive income tax in the United States works.

  • When the IRS calculates how much you owe in taxes, it uses marginal income tax brackets

  • based on the amount of taxable income you earned in a year.

  • These marginal tax rates represent the highest possible income tax rate you could pay.

  • Right now, there are seven tax brackets.

  • But no matter which tax bracket you find yourself inyou're not gonna pay that rate for your entire income.

  • Instead, your taxable income gets divided up into chunks that correspond to each tax rate

  • and you pay the associated rate on each of those chunks.

  • For example, say you made $37,450 as a single filer last year.

  • That would put you in the 15% tax bracket. But, you'd still pay the lower 10% rate on the first $9,225 you made.

  • So if you took the extra $100 and made $37,550 – you'd be bumped up to the 25% tax bracket.

  • But again, you'd only pay 25% on that extra $100. Your effective tax rate would be lower.

  • The other thing you've gotta keep in mind with U.S. income taxes is there are a huge

  • number of tax credits, tax exemptions and tax deductions that reduce the amount people owe.

  • So your tax bill will never be as painful as that 25% tax bracket might make you think.

  • Many other countries around the world have their own progressive income tax systems.

  • But it turns out it's difficult to measure just how progressive any country's total

  • tax system is, especially compared to another country.

  • It's not as easy as looking at countries with the highest marginal tax rates and deciding

  • they have more progressive tax policybecause so many other taxes and tax breaks come into play.

  • In the U.S. some economists argue, the progressiveness of our income tax code offsets the regressiveness

  • of many other taxes we pay.

  • If progressiveness and regressiveness are even words.

  • So we've covered regressive and progressive taxes.

  • The third type of taxes are proportional taxes.

  • Proportional taxes require the same percentage of income for all taxpayers, regardless of how much they make.

  • A flat tax is an example of a proportional tax.

  • You'll hear politicians touting flat taxes

  • in part because they're relatively simple compared to the U.S.'s current, incredibly-elaborate tax code.

  • And because they kind of FEEL fair. Imagine a flat tax of 10%.

  • The woman making $200,000 ends up sending $20,000 to the government,

  • while the guy making $20,000 sends only $2000. They both feel a 10% pinch.

  • Economists who oppose the flat tax say that feelings have no place in the tax code.

  • They argue a flat tax isn't as simple OR as fair as it seems.

  • For one, they say that getting rid of all the tax deductions and exemptions and credits

  • we mentioned earlier could change a whole lot of the economic decision making that happens

  • from saving for retirement in tax protected accounts to home ownership and donating to charities.

  • All those activities are encouraged by the tax code we have now.

  • Like we mentioned before, there are economists who argue that the progressive income tax

  • in the U.S. offsets some of our other, more regressive taxes.

  • They say a flat tax would shift the total tax burden away from the wealthy to the lower

  • and middle classes, actually making our broader tax policy regressive.

  • All of this is complicated. Even if it sounds simple.

  • Before you buy into anyone's plan to reform the tax code, take the time to really read

  • into what it might mean to the economy.

  • And make sure you're comfortable with all the implications.

  • Speaking of implications of tax policy: They can be incredibly serious. And fascinating.

  • A poor tax choice by a government can and has resulted in rebellion. Let's go to the Thought Bubble.

  • One tax rebellion you've probably heard of is the American Revolution.

  • After the Seven Years War ended in 1763, Great Britain had a huge debt to pay off.

  • It needed to raise revenue from somewhere, and looked toward the colonists in America.

  • In 1764, the British Parliament started taxing molasses sales.

  • In 1765, they enacted the Stamp Act, which added taxes to paper and legal documents.

  • Colonists grew more and more frustrated with British officials, both with tax policies and other interventions.

  • Anyway, you know how it goes. "No taxation without representation." Boston Tea Party. A big war.

  • The French get involved. And we end up with a free America. With taxes AND representation.

  • Except in Washington, DC!

  • More recently, in India, there was another super interesting tax rebellioncalled the Salt March.

  • In 1930 India, the British were in charge, and they had laws in place at the time that

  • outlawed Indians from collecting or selling salt.

  • Instead they had to buy it from a British monopoly, which collected an 8.2% salt tax.

  • Mohandas Gandhi decided to defy the Salt Actby walking 240 miles to the coast of the

  • Arabian seato gather tax-free salt.

  • Along his route, more and more Indians joined him in the peaceful civil disobedience.

  • He got to the beach, picked up a piece of salt, and broke the law.

  • Thousands of others followed his leadmaking and selling non-British saltin a non-violent resistance.

  • The Salt March was extensively covered in newsreels and newspapers, and it brought international

  • attention to the largely non-violent Indian struggle for Independence.

  • All that because of taxes. Thanks Thought Bubble.

  • Of course, there are other ways to get around paying taxes you don't want to payother

  • than fighting or starting a mass-civil disobedience movement.

  • Based on historical documents, we know people have been running away from paying taxes for years.

  • Some literally picking up and leaving their homes.

  • Other people have discovered career paths that get them out of tax bills.

  • Historians think that some European men became monks during the Middle Ages to avoid being taxed.

  • There's proof that some Chinese men joined Buddhist monasteries to get out of paying taxes.

  • There is plenty of room for disagreement over how big government should be

  • and what it should and shouldn't be doing.

  • All those discussions matter to you as a taxpayer, and as someone who benefits from taxation and government services.

  • But, as we've said time and time againthere are some services the market just won't provide.

  • Some protections it won't guarantee. No one likes paying taxes. But we do like what they do for us.

  • Thanks for watching, we'll see you next week.

  • Thanks for watching Crash Course Economics.

  • It's made with the help of all these nice people who also think salt taxes are incredibly regressive.

  • You can help keep Crash Course free for everyone forever by supporting the show at Patreon.

  • Patreon is a voluntary subscription service where you help make the show with your monthly

  • non-tax-deductable contribution.

  • And get rewards! Thanks for watching. And don't forget: the next tax bracket's not that scary.

Hi I'm Adriene Hill, this is Crash Course Economics, and today we're going to talk about taxes.

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税金のこと。クラッシュコース経済学 #31 (Taxes: Crash Course Economics #31)

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    Zina Liang に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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