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Every Type of Tax Explained - YouTube
Channel: Mr. Beat
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Hey I’m the Mr. Beat dude
Taxes.
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Everyone just loves taxes. Oh they’re just
great. You work 60 hour weeks busting your
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butt to pay the bills and feed the kids and then
the government just comes along and takes it.
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Takes what you earned. Takes what you deserve.
You know what?!? And taxation is theft!!!
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Ok, during that clip. I calmed
down a bit. I’m a changed man.
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(sighs) Let’s just break down what taxes
are and why we have them first, ok?
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A tax is a required payment to the government.
You have to pay it. If you don’t, there will be
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bad consequences and stuff. Now, why on earth
do we have to pay taxes? So the government
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can pay for stuff. Now, remember, as I said in a
previous video, the purpose of the government is
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to protect society. More specifically, to resolve
conflicts, defend a society from other societies,
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or provide public services. That costs money,
and they need to get that money from somewhere.
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What are they going to do,
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borrow tens of trillions of dollars
to pay for everything? Hahahahahahahha
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but yeah seriously, they do that, too.
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Now remember, in a democratic society,
our tax dollars should ideally go where
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we want them to go. Understandably, many
get upset when this does not happen.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2t1zK24_8MU
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Regardless, let’s go through all the major types
of taxes that governments usually collect. And
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at the end of the video, I will reveal the
type of taxes that I don’t mind so much.
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Before we get into it, holy crap
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Ok, first, let’s look at consumption
taxes, or taxes on the purchase of stuff.
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Sales Taxes
A sales tax is a tax on sales.
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Yeah, since that definition didn’t help
you whatsoever, it’s a tax you pay when you
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buy something. Usually, whoever is selling you
stuff can collect those sales taxes the moment you
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purchase the stuff. That’s why when you buy
that hat for $9.99, you actually end up paying
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$10.79 at the cash register. That additional
80 cents is the sales tax. It’s important to
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note that this is on final goods, or goods
meant to be sold to your average consumer,
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as opposed to intermediate goods, which
are goods bought to produce other goods.
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Nearly every country in the world
has some form of a sales tax. Now,
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there are different types of sales taxes, like
turnover taxes, where there are taxes on the
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sale of the aforementioned intermediate goods.
Or taxes on the sale of specific types of items,
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like the wholesale sales tax, a tax on the
sales of wholesale goods before the goods
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are sent to retailers. Or luxury taxes, taxes
on stuff not considered essential. But...that’s
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enough about sales taxes. Let’s not
get into the weeds too much here.
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Value-added taxes
A value-added tax, or VAT, is a tax on the price
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of a good or service at every stage of production
or distribution. It’s similar to a sales tax,
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but instead of just being applied to the stuff
sold to the consumer, it is applied repeatedly
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at every point of sale at which value has been
added to the stuff. Let’s look at an example.
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Say a farmer sells cotton to a textile producer.
The value has been increased after the textile
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producer buys it, so a VAT is collected by the
farmer. Next, the textile producer sells fabric
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to a hat maker. The value has once again been
increased after the hat maker buys the fabric,
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so an additional VAT is collected by the textile
producer. And finally, the hat maker sells hats to
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the hat store. The value has once again been
increased after the hat store buys the hats,
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so yet an additional VAT is collected by the
hat maker. There is the total VAT collected.
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The vast majority of countries in the world
have a value-added tax, but a glaring exception
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is the United States, which relies on sales taxes
instead. Governments often prefer the VAT over the
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sales tax since it encourages more specialization
and discourages vertical integration,
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which is when one company completely owns and
controls the supply chain. :coughs: Amazon
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Here’s two quick graphs to show you the basic
difference between a sales tax and a VAT.
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Feel free to pause here and
stare at it for 48 seconds.
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Excise taxes
An excise tax is any
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tax on stuff made when it’s produced, as opposed
to when it’s sold. Now, up until recently when I
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taught Economics to my high schoolers,
I gave them the wrong definition, and
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I apologize for that. Please don’t be mad at me
bros. In my defense, most places online define
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an excise tax the way I used to. Basically, a
tax on the sale of specific goods or services,
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or on certain activities. I think the confusion
arises because excise taxes are often sin taxes,
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or excise taxes placed on stuff that most
people view as harmful to society. Ya know,
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stuff like cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana,
gambling, prostitution or even sugary beverages.
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But the main thing that makes an
excise tax, an excise tax, is that
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businesses pay them, not consumers. Both excise
taxes and value-added taxes are often called
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“indirect taxes” since consumers end up indirectly
paying them anyway because producers and retailers
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will end up just raising their prices when
they have to pay excise and value-added taxes.
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Regardless, many folks are cool with excise taxes,
as long as they are sin taxes, because they think
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if something is bad for you or society, then
it should be more expensive to discourage folks
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from buying it. Take gas taxes. I’m currently
in Missouri, and I’m getting gas here because
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it’s much cheaper than in Kansas. Why? Missouri
has lower per-gallon excise taxes on gasoline.
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So yeah, excise taxes are usually a fixed
amount for each unit of a good or service sold,
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and governments also apply them
to a narrow range of goods.
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Other common targets of excise taxes include
salt, paper, advertising, and coffee?
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Oh you BETTER not be taxing my coffee!
So those are the three main consumption
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taxes. Critics often say consumption taxes
are the most regressive form of taxation,
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since folks who have the least amount of wealth
end up paying a larger portion of their wealth
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in taxes than wealthier individuals do. One way
governments have attempted to solve the problem
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of sales taxes being regressive is allowing sales
tax exemptions, meaning certain organizations
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like schools or nonprofit hospitals don’t have to
pay sales taxes. Or, governments may make certain
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goods sales tax exempt, like clothing, groceries,
and other stuff that’s important for survival.
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Next up are taxes on property!
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Woohoo!
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Property taxes
A property tax is a recurring tax
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paid based on the value of the property
we own. Typically, it’s on real estate,
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like land and buildings, but also personal
property like vehicles and equipment. At minimum,
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we usually pay property taxes once a year, and
if the value goes up on our property...yay!...we
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get to pay more property taxes. But
if the value goes down...yay!...we
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get to pay LESS property taxes but...boo!...our
stuff is worth less so that sucks and stuff.
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Governments may also collect property
taxes when the property changes owners.
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Oh, and by the way, property taxes are the single
biggest source of state and local revenue in
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the United States, funding things like schools,
roads, the police, and other important services.
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Next up are taxes on assets. And in case you
forgot what assets are, they are anything of
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value that can be converted into money.
Estate taxes
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An estate tax is a tax on your right to transfer
wealth at your death. It’s automatically taken
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out of someone’s estate- eh, get it?- upon their
death. Typically, governments collect estate taxes
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on estates with assets worth at least tens
of millions of dollars, so uh, most of you
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watching this video right now won’t have to worry
about this one. Oh, and critics of estate taxes
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often nickname them “death taxes,” which I think
is pretty effective use of language there buddy.
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Related to estate taxes are inheritance
taxes, which also revolve around the idea
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that many have that if you’re getting
free money from a dead relative,
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it’s ok for the government to take some of
it since you didn’t earn that inheritance,
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amirite? Anyway, an inheritance tax is what the
beneficiary, or the person inheriting the wealth,
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has to pay when they receive the inheritance.
Wealth taxes
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A wealth tax is a tax on a person’s total net
worth. To figure out a person’s net worth,
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we look at the value of their
assets minus their debt. So like,
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if they had $10 million in assets and $1 million
in debt, their net worth would be $9 million.
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I think my net worth is negative, by the way.
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Anyway, similar to property taxes, a wealth
tax is recurring, Wealth taxes are not that
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common around the world. Some European
governments collect them once a year,
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and Colombia and Argentina both have a wealth
tax. Apparently it has already raised billions
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in Argentina, but European countries have
had less success raising money this way
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since people have hid their assets or
taken their assets to other countries.
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And so, others favor taxes on earned wealth
in a given year, not accumulated wealth.
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Income taxes
This is probably
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the tax that most of you complain about the most.
An income tax is a recurring tax on your income,
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or the money you make. It’s the main reason
why your paycheck isn’t as high as it should
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be. But it’s not just on wages or salaries.
It’s also on other forms of investments an
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individual or household earns. Now, there
can be expenses and deductions that lower
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the amount of income that is taxed, and
that’s why filing your income taxes can
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get quite tricky to a point where many hire
someone to file their income taxes for them.
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The vast majority of income
taxes are “progressive,”
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meaning tax rates increase as a person’s income
increases, meaning they end up paying a larger
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percentage of income taxes than those who earn
less. Typically a progressive tax system has
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tax brackets, so different portions of
your income are taxed at different rates.
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The rate you pay on the last dollar you earn
is often higher than what you pay on the first
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dollar you earn. Governments always start at
zero when calculating. In the United States,
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there are currently seven different tax brackets
at rates of 10, 12, 22, 24, 32, 35, and 37. Most
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Americans don’t ever have to worry about paying
more than 22% of the last dollar they earn.
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Ok, enough of that. Some places
have a proportional income tax,
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in which the tax rate is fixed, so you pay the
same percentage no matter what your income is.
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Now, if you are self-employed, you
often have to calculate your own
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income and pay the government directly.
Employers often collect payroll taxes.
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So how do the richest citizens get
out of paying so much in income taxes?
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By reporting a lower income of course! But
there’s another way to get their income.
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Capital gains taxes
A capital gains tax is a tax on the profit
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on the sale of an asset. Often this is through
the sale of stocks, bonds, precious metals,
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or cryptocurrency. Even antiques can be subject
to a capital gains tax if you make enough money
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from them. The capital gains tax rate depends
on how much profit you gained in a given year.
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It is FAR more common than a wealth tax,
mostly since it’s easier to keep track of.
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However, often wealthy folks just hold
on to assets...they don’t sell them,
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so that’s why some argue a wealth tax
might be better to generate more money.
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A lot of folks ask me for money, probably since
they think I’m actually Mr. Beast, But what if I
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were to give you $15,000? Now, I’d have to check
with Mrs. Beat to make sure it was ok first.
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Gift taxes
A gift tax is a tax
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on money or property simply given to another
person. So it’s similar to an estate tax or
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inheritance tax. Related to the gift tax is the
generation-skipping transfer tax, when someone
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wants to give money or assets to a grandchild
or an unrelated person much younger than them.
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Wait a second, don’t corporations
earn income, too? Why yes they do.
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Corporate Income Taxes
A corporate income tax,
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or simply corporate tax, is a tax on business
profits, which are revenues minus expenses.
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Typically corporate tax rates are flat. The thing
about corporate taxes is that they indisputably
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create tax havens. See all these countries? They
all have an effective 0% corporate tax rate,
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which is why so many companies incorporate
headquarters in them to avoid paying taxes
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on their annual profits. Here’s one example.
Back in 2017, Google shifted $23 billion to
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tax haven Bermuda. So yeah, this is one big
reason why corporate taxes remain controversial.
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Oh, and how could I forget…
Tariffs
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Tariffs are taxes on stuff crossing an
international border. Ya know, imports
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and exports. But mostly imports. Tariffs can be a
fixed percentage of the price or change according
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to the price. Historically, tariffs have been
an important source of revenue for governments.
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The idea is that governments can both make money
and encourage production to stay domestic. A
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win-win, right? Eh, not quite. Nearly every
economist out there argues tariffs have a negative
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effect on economic growth and economic welfare,
and that free trade and the reduction of trade
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barriers is the best way to grow an economy. That
said, free trade can lead to income inequality,
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like we see around the world currently, so that’s
why many politicians have called for tariffs.
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In conclusion, there are MANY types of taxes
I haven’t even mentioned, but those are
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the main types. But yeah, in general, there’s
three types of taxes. Taxes on what you buy,
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taxes on what you own, and taxes
on what you earn. Now excuse me,
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I got a letter from the IRS. Apparently I
owe them...seriously. I gotta go pay this.
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So, what’s YOUR favorite type
of tax? Or should I say, what’s
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the type of tax you hate the least
amount? Let me know in the comments below.
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Next week, the wildly successful YouTube series
Supreme Court Briefs makes its dramatic return.
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Let’s see, what else. Oh, don’t forget to
follow me on TikTok and stuff. I’ve been
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posting more on there lately. Ok, I think
that’s it for now. Thanks for watching!
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