What is VAT? | Back to Basics - YouTube

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Hi, I'm Alex.
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Wanna catch a movie?
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Now, I know what you鈥檙e thinking.
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I clicked to watch a video about value added tax, not movies.
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Well, taxes and movies
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have more in common than you might think.
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They both generate revenue.
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They can be really complicated,
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and some are just blockbusters.
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Like our old friend, Value Added Tax -
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also known as VAT.
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or a goods and services tax.
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So how do value added taxes work?
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Let me explain... with popcorn. Obviously.
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The corn starts out in a field with the farmer growing his crop.
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He sells it to a company that takes the corn
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and puts it in fancy packaging.
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Then that company sells
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the packaged products to the cinema
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and ultimately to the customer.
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Now, let鈥檚 rewind and watch that again.
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And this time, let鈥檚 assume that the country
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where all this is taking place
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has a 10% value added tax.
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Here's how that works.
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Our farmer sells his popcorn for $10,
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but the packaging company buying it,
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they actually pay him $11.
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So why the extra dollar?
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Because that鈥檚 the 10% VAT.
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That same thing happens again
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when the company sells the packaged popcorn
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to the cinema for a profit.
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So now the price is $15.
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But with the added 10% VAT,
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the cinema actually pays $16 and fifty cents.
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And then finally, the cinema sells the popcorn
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to the customer for $20.
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And that customer, once the VAT has been added,
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is paying $22.
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So far, so good.
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But here's the added ingredient
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that advocates of VAT say makes the system really work.
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And that鈥檚 tax credit for businesses.
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The tax credit is just an amount
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that a business can subtract
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from the VAT it owes the government.
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VAT makes it so that while everyone on the supply chain
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pays their 10% in tax,
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they also get tax credits
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for whatever鈥檚 already been paid by those selling to them.
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So across the whole process,
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it's a flat rate of 10%.
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In the end, only the consumers
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actually pay the VAT since they
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aren't granted a credit.
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Oh great, it鈥檚 starting! Let鈥檚 go!
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So the thing is,
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so the thing is...
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Let's take this somewhere else.
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You may have noticed how popular
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that handsome actor was.
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Real star power.
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Well, that's kind of like value added taxes.
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They're one of the biggest sources
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of tax revenue in the world.
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More than 160 countries have a VAT.
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Why?
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Well, there's less tax evasion.
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VATs are a built-in cost,
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so each business
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isn't just collecting the tax themselves,
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so they鈥檙e motivated to report their taxes honestly
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to get those tax credits.
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And it's important that they do.
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While VAT rates are different in each country,
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the average VAT raises around a third of a country鈥檚 tax revenue.
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So it鈥檚 an important source of funding for everything
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from improving our infrastructure,
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and countering climate change, to creating equality,
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and improving health and social safety nets.
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But just as with any movie,
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VATs have their critics.
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Some say that having a VAT is unfair to poorer people
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because they spend most of their income,
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so they face a higher burden.
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But a lot of those concerns can be answered by
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using the money from VAT
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to help the most vulnerable.
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Some argue that reducing the
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VAT rate on basic food
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could be a solution, but it ends
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up benefitting those who don't need it
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and makes VAT collection more complex.
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That can be avoided by making sure
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that there's a single universal VAT rate
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and using progressive income taxes
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and cash transfers
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to support poorer households.
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And that鈥檚 VAT.
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Cut!
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Feels like we could have gone
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for more of a Hollywood ending, right?
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That鈥檚 VAT.