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The Tax You Love to Pay (standard:Editorials, 1853 words) | |||
Author: GXD | Added: Jul 31 2007 | Views/Reads: 3425/2249 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Suppose you could choose precisely where each and every penny of your sales tax goes, and specify how it is to be spent. Well, now you can! | |||
THE TAX YOU LOVE TO PAY About thirty years ago, when taxes were relatively low and a hundred dollars a week was considered a pretty good salary, I proposed this procedure for creating revenue for funding all sorts of useful things, from social security to repairing potholes in side streets. The suggestion fell on deaf ears. Today, the situation is a little different, and perhaps some people out there might find some merit in the idea. I've presented a few details here, but you may want to alter, improve, upgrade, polish, refine, expand, develop, or otherwise enhance and simplify the concept, so it can be put to use in the best of human interests. To begin with, here is what you see: As you leave the drugstore with some shaving cream and toothpaste, the clerk tears a receipt out of the register and puts it in your bag. The receipt shows that 14 cents in tax was collected on your purchases. Immediately, you take out your pencil and look on the back of the receipt. Right there, in small, but legible print it says: [ ]repair of local streets [ ]support U.N. representative Koch [ ]state school program - teachers' raise [ ]anti-terrorist fund (world) [ ]re-open local playground; new paving under swings and you check the issue (or two) dearest to your heart. Fourteen cents will go into that fund. Next to you, your neighbor has gotten a similar receipt. Everything it says is different, and she checks off something else. You both drop the receipts in a collection box near the register and forget about it. But your money is already on its way, doing something useful and positive - something YOU want done to improve your society, your world. How does this happen: what is behind the scenes? Where do the issues arise? How much of your purchase goes to support them? You might notice that the front of your receipt lists only the total amount of your purchase, plus any other current taxes (which, of course, could be removed if you really wanted to). Let's first track down that receipt and see what happens to your "vote". First, an employee of the special branch of the postal service collects the receipts and deposits them in the same way as mail is collected and deposited today. At fixed hours, the receipts are picked up at the collection boxes and brought to a local center for processing. Tens of thousands of marked receipts go into the sorting equipment, which turns them the right way, feeds them to the scanner, and records your "vote". Simultaneously, a scanner underneath detects the amount on the face of the receipt. The information goes into a processing computer at the post office which determines whether you checked a "local" box (rated at 2%), a "county" box (rated at 1%), a "state" box (rated at 5%), a "national" box (rated at 3%) or a "world" box (rated at 2%). It computes that percentage of the price you paid, picks up the store identification (imprinted in the receipt using an ultraviolet detectable ink), scans for evidence of forged receipts and transmits the information package electronically to the agency which originated the item you checked: the local town council computer, the county computer, the state computer, the national computer, the U.N. data center, etc. Each time a receipt carries the box "fix potholes in local streets" and that box has been checked, a few pennies get credited to that budget. When the budgeted amount has been reached, the computer makes a number of preprogrammed choices: it dumps the overflow into a "General Fund", which can then be drawn on to complete missing funds for other essential projects which have received less support (like "clean out the sewers"). It notifies the register-tape machine to stop including the fulfilled item on the back of the register tape rolls which it has been printing. It notifies the highway maintenance office that "Public Click here to read the rest of this story (133 more lines)
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