.
How Sales Taxes Hit Wages |
| [Reprinted from The
Freeman, August, 1939] |
During the last few years there has been a very wide adoption of sales
taxes. There have been two main reasons for this. One reason has been
the desire to provide relief for the unemployed and distressed during
years of depression. The other has been the desire to lighten the taxes
on property, especially real estate.
In this latter connection, we must absolutely not forget that real
estate is NOT just one thing but is TWO things. It includes land AND
improvements. The improvements are due to the labor and thrift of
individuals. The land is a result of geological forces; and the value of
the land is chiefly a by-product of community growth and development.
Whatever may be said in favor of relieving from taxes the owners of
houses, barns, fences, fruit trees, stores and factories, which cannot
come into existence except through labor, the same arguments cannot be
used in favor of relieving community-produced land value of taxation and
thereby allowing private individuals to appropriate this
community-produced location value to their own pockets.
Are we to adopt a tax system -- the sales tax -- that is a heavy burden
on the poor, merely in order that such community-produced location value
may be appropriated by private individuals?
Sales taxes drive a wedge between prices to consumers, on the one hand,
and the outlays of producing companies for such expenses as wages, on
the other. When such taxes are levied, either prices to consumers must
rise or the expenses of production, such as wages, must fall. If the
expenses of production are lowered, as by reduction of wages (the
largest production expense), there is clearly a tax burden on wage
earners. Probably the idea that the widespread adoption of taxes on
production and sales actually reduces the money put into workers' pay
envelopes scarcely ever occurs to any wage earner. Yet this must be the
case. Production and sales taxes may be fairly spoken of, therefore, as
taxes that are levied directly on the pay envelope. If a considerable
.part of the price paid by consumers is taken by the state in taxation,
there must obviously be less of the price remaining to pay the workers;
the workers must obviously not be worth so much to the companies that
employ them; and they must either accept lower wages or suffer a large
degree of unemployment.
But if, instead of any measurable fall in the expenses of production,
there should be a rise in prices to consumers -- and unless the one
result occurs the other must occur -- this also would be a burden on
wage earners. What real difference does it make to the worker whether
the number of dollars in his pay envelope is measurably reduced or, the
number of dollars in his pay envelope approximately the same, prices
rise so that each dollar buys less? In either case, his wages measured
in the necessities and comforts of life are definitely reduced. Besides
this clear burden, there is, in the case of sales taxes, an additional
nuisance burden to both merchants and consumers.
One of the arguments advanced for sales taxes is to provide relief for
the poor and unemployed. Relief for the poor by burdening other poor!
The subtraction from the wages of some workers to provide relief for
others may, and probably often does, put some of the workers who are
thus taxed, into a position where they, too, need relief, though they
may often fail to get it.
Why is the community-produced location value of land so sacred a source
of private income that we must be forever trying to relieve the
recipients of. this income from taxation and resorting, for schools,
police, courts, roads, and aid for 'the poor, to taxation not only on
thrift and enterprise' but on wage earners' incomes and on the pitiful1
incomes of the very poorest of them?
|