Papaumau wrote:
JT....you said....JT wrote:
If, for instance there is a genuine need for heavier investment in - say - the NHS, then the Government should tell us all about it and then set up a taxation scheme to collect it fairly. If we don't agree with this then we vote against it at the next election - surely that's how democracy is supposed to work?
After saying that my idea of ring-fencing is unrealistic you then go on to explain how it could be done !
Indeed I did! My point about "unrealistic" being that it was unrealistic to expect the Government to do it - or even to consider it!
As I said originally, every additional "cross-subsidising" tax that is imposed backs the Government into the corner of supporting the very thing they are apparently trying to discourage. It's the perfect paradox!
Smoking is a good example. Even allowing for the NHS burden HM Govt makes a massive profit from tobacco tax. So every time they increase this tax it makes them more committed to needing it, and less inclined to introduce any real measures to reduce tobacco consumption. If they genuinely wanted to eradicate smoking then the first step along the way would have to be to remove their own addiction to the revenue it generates, ie by
reducing the rate of tobacco taxation.
As a good (but cynical) rule of thumb, I would say it is safe to assume that if anything is heavily taxed by the Govt, then the underlying policy is to increase it's consumption.
Is this what happens when the worlds of Capitalism and Democracy collide?
