The man does have a point here:
British Retail Consortium director-general Kevin
Hawkins warned the proposal could cost high street stores as much as
£500m a year, adding: " Giving local authorities the power to directly
tax businesses is like setting Pooh Bear loose on honey reserves, only
it is retailers that will get stung.
"We do not
support taxation without representation and supplementary business
rates would give councillors the freedom to tax businesses without
having to face them at the ballot box."
Of course, that extends to the taxation of corporate profits as well.
The truly unfortunate thing though is that the general public doesn’t understand the truth about such taxation: that it isn’t actually the companies that pay it. It’s some combination of the workers (in the form of lower salaries), the customers (in higher prices) and the investors (in lower returns). It would be better by far for the taxes to be raised, if raised they must be, directly from those three groups, rather than from the companies.
But to do so would, unfortunately, lead to cries of the companies not paying "their fair share": because, alas, the voters don’t understand this basic point.
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