The various forms of taxation have different economic impacts individually, and a collective impact; some are chosen for political impact.
Government spend is ultimately funded by tax receipts. For any desired level of government spending, the tax must come from somewhere. The choice of what to tax is partly an economic matter – whatever does least damage to the economy – and partly political: considering the unpopularity of the tax and taking account of its relative impact on rich and poor people. The political sensitivities are discussed later (6.7.1).
In practice taxation has to be levied across the whole of a society, although there may be scope for changing the subsidiarity of tax collection so that more decisions can be taken locally (3.4.5). Analyses of government tax budgets are often available online, for example:
The US Federal Budget Breakdown for 2020-21, from thebalance.com.
The British government’s monthly summaries of its tax income.
Forms of taxation have different economic effects, as examined in the following sub-sections:
· Wealthy people pay a higher proportion of their income and wealth under systems of 'progressive' taxation (3.2.4.1), but 'regressive' systems are disadvantageous to the less wealthy.
· Some taxes are not immediately visible to those who pay them: ‘stealth taxes’ (3.2.4.2).
· Taxation changes people’s behaviour (3.2.4.3), sometimes in unintended ways.
· Tax exemptions, evasion, and aggressive legal tax avoidance all shift the burden of taxation onto other people (3.2.4.4).
· Some taxes may be targeted so that poor people don’t pay them (3.2.4.5). The effect, though, is to benefit very wealthy people at the expense of those whose incomes are just above the threshold.
· There are constraints on how much tax a government can raise, before higher tax rates lead to lower total receipts (3.2.4.6).
(This is an archive of a page intended to form part of Edition 4 of the Patterns of Power series of books. The latest versions are at book contents).