Economic nature of taxes презентация

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Basic terminology

tax agent — a person who in accordance with this Code

is entrusted with the duty of assessment, withholding and transfer of taxes withheld at source of payment;
taxes — obligatory monetary payments to the budget as established by the state through legislation in a unilateral procedure, except for the cases specified in this Code, which are paid in certain amounts, which are irrevocable and non-refundable

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Basic terminology

A tax can be defined as a payment to support the

cost of government. A tax differs from a fine or penalty imposed by a government because a tax is not intended to deter or punish unacceptable behavior. On the other hand, taxes are compulsory rather than voluntary on the part of the payer.
A tax differs from a user's fee because the payment of a tax does not entitle the payer to a specific good or service in return. In the abstract, citizens receive any number of government benefits for their tax dollars. Nevertheless, the value of government benefits received by any particular person is not correlated to the tax that person must pay.

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Basic terminology

A taxpayer is any person or organization required by law to

pay a tax to a governmental authority. In our country, the term person refers to both natural persons (individuals) and corporations. Corporations are entities organized under the laws. These corporate entities generally enjoy the same legal rights, privileges, and protections as individuals.
The incidence of a tax refers to the ultimate economic burden represented by the tax. Most people jump to the conclusion that the person or organization who makes a direct tax payment to the government bears the incidence of such tax. But in some cases, the payer can shift the incidence to a third party. Consider the following examples.

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Income tax incidence

Government G imposes a new tax on corporate business profits.

A manufacturing corporation with monopoly on a product in great demand by the public responds to the new tax by increasing the retail price at which it sells the product. In this case, the corporation is nominally the taxpayer and must remit the new tax to the government. The economic burden of the tax falls on the corporation's customers who are indirectly paying the tax in the form of a higher price for the same product.

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The Relationship between Base, Rate, and Revenue

Taxes are usually characterized by reference to

their base. A tax base is an item, occurrence, transaction, or activity with respect to which a tax is levied. Tax bases are usually expressed in monetary terms. For instance, real property taxes are levied on the ownership of land and buildings, and the dollar value of the property is the tax base. When designing a tax, governments try to identify tax bases that taxpayers cannot easily avoid or conceal. In this respect, real property is an excellent tax base because it cannot be moved or hidden, and its ownership is a matter of public record.

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The Relationship between Base, Rate, and Revenue

The amount of a tax is calculated

by multiplying the base by a tax rate, which is usually expressed as a percentage. This relationship is expressed by the following formula.
Tax (T) = Rate (r) X Base (B)
A single percentage that applies to the entire tax base is described as a flat rate. Many types of taxes use a graduated rate structure consisting of multiple percentages that apply to specified portions or brackets of the tax base.

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Standards for good taxes

Theorists maintain that every tax can and should be

evaluated on certain basic standards. These standards can be summarized as follows:
A good tax should be sufficient to raise the necessary government revenues.
A good tax should be convenient for the government to administer and for people to pay.
A good tax should be efficient in economic terms.
A good tax should be fair.

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Sufficiency

The first standard by which to evaluate a tax is its sufficiency as

a revenue raiser. A tax is sufficient if it generates enough funds to pay for the public goods and services provided by the government. After all, the reason that governments tax their citizens in the first place is to raise revenues needed for specific purposes. If a tax (or combination of taxes) is sufficient, a government can balance its budget. Tax revenues equal government spending, and the government has no need to raise additional funds.

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Sufficiency

What is the consequence of an insufficient tax system? The government must make

up its revenue shortfall (the excess of current spending over tax receipts) from some other source. We know that state governments now depend heavily on legalized gambling as an alternative source of funds. Governments may own assets or property rights that they can lease or sell to raise money.

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Sufficiency

Another option is for governments to borrow money to finance their operating deficits


Debt financing is not a permanent solution to an insufficient tax system. Like other debtors, governments must pay in­terest on borrowed funds. As the public debt increases, so does the annual interest burden. At some point, a government may find itself in the untenable position of borrowing new money not to provide more public goods and services but merely to pay the interest on existing debt.

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TAXES SHOULD BE CONVENIENT

Our second standard for evaluating a tax is convenience. From

the government's viewpoint, a good tax should be convenient to administer. Specifically, the government should have a method for collecting the tax that most taxpayers understand and with which they routinely cooperate. The collection method should not overly intrude on taxpayers' privacy but should offer minimal opportunity for noncompliance.
A good tax should be economical for the government. The administrative cost of collecting and enforcing the tax should be reasonable in comparison with the total revenue generated.

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TAXES SHOULD BE CONVENIENT

From the taxpayer's viewpoint, a good tax should be convenient

to pay. The convenience standard suggests that people can compute their tax with reasonable certainty. Moreover, they do not have to devote undue time or incur undue costs in complying with the tax law. A retail sales tax receives high marks when judged by these criteria. People can easily compute the sales tax on a purchase and can pay the tax as part of the purchase price with no effort whatsoever!

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TAXES SHOULD BE EFFICIENT

Our third standard for a good tax is economic efficiency.

Tax policymakers use the term : efficiency in two different ways. Sometimes the term describes a tax that does not interfere with or influence taxpayers' economic behavior. At other times, policymakers describe a tax as efficient when individuals or organizations react to the tax by deliberately changing their economic behavior.

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The Classical Standard of Efficiency

The classical economist Adam Smith believed that taxes should

have as little effect as possible on the economy. In his 1776 masterwork, The Wealth of Nations, Smith concluded the following:
A tax ... may obstruct the industry of the people, and discourage them from applying to certain branches of business which might give maintenance and employment to great multitudes. While it obliges the people to pay, it may thus diminish, or perhaps destroy, some of the funds which might enable them more easily to do so.

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The Classical Standard of Efficiency

The laissez-faire system favored by Adam Smith theoretically creates

a level playing field on which individuals and organizations, operating in their own self-interest, freely compete. When governments interfere with the system by taxing certain economic activi­ties, the playing field tilts against the competitors engaging in those activities. The capitalistic game is disrupted, and the outcome may no longer be the best for society.
Of course, every modern economy has a tax system, and firms functioning within the economy must adapt to that system. Business managers become familiar with the existing tax laws and make decisions based on those laws. To return to the sports metaphor, these managers have adjusted their game plan to suit the present contours of the economic playing field.

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Taxes as an Instrument of Fiscal Policy

The British economist John Maynard Keynes disagreed

with the classical notion that a good tax should be neutral. Keynes believed that free markets are effective in organizing production and allocating scarce resources but lack adequate self-regulating mechanisms for maintaining economic stability. According to Keynes, governments should protect their citizens and institutions against the inherent instability of capitalism.

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Taxes as an Instrument of Fiscal Policy

Historically, this instability caused cycles of high

unemployment, severe fluctuations in prices (inflation or deflation), and uneven economic growth. Lord Keynes believed that governments could counteract these problems through fiscal policies to promote full employment, price-level stability, and a steady rate of economic growth.

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Taxes as an Instrument of Fiscal Policy

In the Keynesian schema, tax systems are

a primary tool of fiscal policy. Rather than trying to design a neutral tax system, governments should deliberately use taxes to move the economy in the desired direction. If an economy is suffering from sluggish growth and high unemployment, the government could reduce taxes to transfer funds from the public to the private sector

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Taxes as an Instrument of Fiscal Policy

The tax cut should both stimulate demand

for consumer goods and services and increase private investment. As a result, the economy should expand and new jobs should be created. Conversely, if an economy is overheated so that wages and prices are in an inflationary spiral, the government could raise taxes. People will have less money to spend, the demand for consumer and investment goods should soften, and the upward pressure on wages and prices should be relieved.

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Taxes and Behavior Modification

Modern governments use their tax systems to address not only

macroeconomic concerns but also social problems. Many such problems could be alleviated if people or institutions could be persuaded to alter their behavior. Governments can promote behavioral change by writing tax laws to penalize undesirable behavior or reward desirable behavior. The penalty takes the form of a higher tax burden, while the reward is some type of tax relief.

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Taxes and Behavior Modification

Some of the social problems that the federal income tax

system tries to remedy are by­products of the free enterprise system, which economists refer to as negative externalities. One of the most widely recognized is environmental pollution. The tax system contains provisions that either pressure or entice companies to clean up their act, so to speak.

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Income Tax Preferences

Provisions in the federal income tax system designed as incentives for

certain behaviors or as subsidies for targeted activities are described as tax preferences. These provisions do not contribute to the accurate measurement of the tax base or the correct calculation of the tax. Tax preferences do not support the primary function of the law, which is to raise rev­enues. In fact, tax preferences do just the opposite. Because they allow certain persons or organizations to pay less tax, preferences lose money for the Treasury. In this respect, preferences are indirect government expenditures.

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Taxes should be fair

Ability to pay
A useful was to begin our

discussion of equity is with the proposition that each person’s contribution to the support of the government should reflect that person’s ability to pay.
In the tax policy literature, ability to pay refers to the economic resources under person’s control. Each of the major taxes is based on some dimension of ability to pay.

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Taxes should be fair

For instance, income taxes are based on the person’s inflow

of economic resources during the year;
Sales and excise taxes are based on a different dimension of ability to pay: a person’s consumption of resources represented by purchase of goods and services
Real and personal property taxes complement income and sale taxes by focusing on the third dimension of ability to pay: a person’s accumulation of resources in the form of property

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Horizontal equity

If a tax is designed so that persons with the same

ability to pay (as measured by the tax base) owe the same amount of tax, that system can be described as horizontally equitable. The structure of certain taxes guarantees their horizontal equity.

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Vertical Equity

A tax system is vertically equitable if persons with a greater ability

to pay owe more tax than persons with a lesser ability to pay. While horizontal equity is concerned with a ratio­nal and impartial measurement of the tax base, vertical equity is concerned with a fair rate structure by which to calculate the tax.

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The classification of taxes

Mainly the taxes can be classified based on different

conditions:
Depending on the burden of the tax payer;
Depending on the type of a tax ;
Depending on subject of tax;
Depending on jurisdictions;

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The classification of taxes

Depending on the burden of the tax payer;

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2. Depending on type of tax

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3) Depending on subject

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4) Depending on jurisdiction

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Tax system of the Republic of Kazakhstan

Corporate income tax;
Individual income tax
Value

added tax
Excise taxes
Rent tax on export
Subsoil users’ taxes
Social tax
Vehicle tax
Land tax
Gambling industry taxes
Property tax
Fixed tax

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The Taxation Principles in the Republic of Kazakhstan

The tax legislation of the Republic

of Kazakhstan shall be based upon the taxation principles. The principles of the obligatory nature, of the certainty, fairness of taxation, unity of the tax system and publicity of the tax legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan shall be recognised as the taxation principles.

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The Principle of the Obligatory Nature of Taxation

The taxpayers shall be obliged to

perform tax obligations, the tax agents — the obligation of the assessment, withholding and transferring taxes in accordance with the tax legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan in full volume and within established time.

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The Principle of Certainty of Taxation

Taxes and other obligatory payments to the budget

of the Republic of Kazakhstan must be well-defined. The certainty of taxation shall be understood as establishing in the tax legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan of all reasons and procedure for the emergence, implementation and termination of tax obligations of taxpayers, duties of tax agents with regard to the assessment, withholding and transfer of taxes.

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The Principle of Fairness of Taxation

1. Taxation in the Republic of Kazakhstan shall

be universal and obligatory.
2. It shall be prohibited to grant tax privileges of individual nature.

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The Principle of Unity of the Tax System

The tax system of the Republic

of Kazakhstan shall be uniform in the entire territory of the Republic of Kazakhstan with regard to all taxpayers (tax agents).

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The Principle of Publicity of Tax Legislation of the Republic of Kazakhstan

Regulatory legal

acts which regulate issues of taxation shall be subject to obligatory publication in official publications.

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Contemporary conditions

At February 6, 2008, the President of Kazakhstan assigned to the

government of the Republic of Kazakhstan to establish new tax code. In his speech to the nation, the President outlined such main objective as to update tax system in accordance with new stage of development of Kazakhstan, facilitate diversification and modernization of the economy and reduce tax pressure on non-industrial sectors of the economy.

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Contemporary conditions

As a result of the outlined objectives, the working group was

established by the decree of the Prime Minister to create new tax code.
At August 2008, the draft of the new tax code was presented to the Mazhylis of the Republic of Kazakhstan. It was signed by the President of Kazakhstan at December 10, 2008.

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Contemporary conditions

In the light of these changes, it is planned to reduce

gradually the rate of Corporate income tax; from January 2009 up to 20%, from 2010 up to 17,5%, and in 2011 up to 15%.
The new tax code excludes payments in advance for small and medium businesses
The rate of Value added tax was established at the rate of 12 %. This is one of the lowest VAT rates in the world.
The tax reform also considered the simplification of the methods of tax computation.
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