An article by Dr. Ciel Habito last week was shared in fb by several friends yesterday. Ciel wrote,
I commented that it is both a culture of exemptions and a culture of envy. Why would the government attempts to confiscate 1/3 of a company's income in the first place? Because govt thinks that all companies are making money and rich and wealthy and so they must pay as high as possible to the state.
Why is it that we have a lower tax effort (tax revenues
in proportion to gross domestic product) than most of our neighbors, and yet
have higher tax rates than they do? Consider the following: In 2014, Philippine
government revenues as a percent of GDP was 15.1 percent. The corresponding percentage
was 19.9 for Malaysia, 18.5 for Singapore, 19.7 for Thailand, 16.5 for
Cambodia, and 21.5 for Vietnam. And yet, among our neighbors, we have the
highest rates of corporate income tax and value-added tax, and one of the
highest for personal income tax.
Our corporate income tax rate of 30 percent well exceeds
the Asia-wide average of 22.5 percent, with Indonesia and Malaysia having 25
percent, Vietnam 22 percent, Thailand and Cambodia 20 percent, and Singapore
and Taiwan 17 percent. We also have the highest value-added tax or general
sales tax, with our 12 percent VAT being higher than the 10 percent for
Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam and Cambodia; 7 percent for Singapore and
Thailand; and 5 percent for Taiwan. Our individual income tax has a top rate of
32 percent, against the Asia-wide average of only 28.4 percent. While ours is
lower than Taiwan’s 40 percent and Thailand and Vietnam’s 35 percent, it is
higher than Indonesia’s 30 percent, Malaysia’s 26 percent, and Singapore’s 20
percent.
I commented that it is both a culture of exemptions and a culture of envy. Why would the government attempts to confiscate 1/3 of a company's income in the first place? Because govt thinks that all companies are making money and rich and wealthy and so they must pay as high as possible to the state.
Two rules of the politics of envy: (1) confiscate as much
as possible from the private sector; (2) many of the latter will be hurt so
they will ask for favor/exemptions, that's the time for rent-seeking,
extortion, favoritism and picking winners. The central planners, legislators
and bureaucrats decide who should be favored and who should not.
That is why most central planners would hate low taxes,
it removes their arbitrary power who should be given exemption and who should
not.
The culture of envy is reflected on the tax rates. 30%
income tax is envy, why would govt have the "entitlement" to get such
amount from the efforts of working people? The culture of exemptions is reflected on low collection
rates.
I think a flat income tax rate of 10%, zero exemption,
will be a good compromise. Look again the demand curve, the lower the price,
the higher the quantity that consumers will buy. Same with income tax, the
lower the income tax rate, the higher the number of entrepreneurs who will come
to do business. Overall, low tax rate (t) x high number of taxpayers (Q) = t xQ
= higher tax revenues (TR)
The Laffer curve is telling high tax
rate-countries like the PH that their 30%, 25% or even 20% income tax rate
is not optimal, high on the horizontal axis (tax rate) but low on the vertical
(tax revenues). HK collects only 17%, SG about 16% and they have more
businessmen, more taxpayers.
I wish to see a zero income tax. Like Monaco, Brunei,
even Saudi, etc. Their govts earn from many other revenues like selling land
(all lands are owned by the state until they are privatized; HK model somehow),
selling natural gas or petroleum (Brunei, Saudi, etc models), selling mineral
products, etc. Or collect other taxes like VAT/GST, property tax, etc.
One beauty of small countries, small governments. they
are forced to become efficient, outward looking and more business friendly,
less bureaucratic, less tax-hungry.
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See also:
Tax cut 26, Excise tax on petrol products should be reduced/abolished, not increased, September 12, 2016
Tax Cut 27, The Furusato tax in Japan as possible model in citizen empowerment, October 14, 2016 Tax Cut 28, On Trump's planned 15% income tax, January 23, 2017
Tax Cut 27, The Furusato tax in Japan as possible model in citizen empowerment, October 14, 2016 Tax Cut 28, On Trump's planned 15% income tax, January 23, 2017
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