Title: TAXES
1TAXES
2The principles of taxation
3How to tax fairly
- Ability to pay principle reflected by the
progressive taxes. - Benefits principle people getting most benefit
from public spending should pay most for it (e.g.
Car users taxed to finance public roads). - This two may be in conflict! (than ability to pay
should prevail)
4The progressive tax and benefit structure because
of
- Transfer payments give money to the poor
(pensions for old ones, unemployment
benefits,supplementary benefits for poor). - Public goods provided by a state (can by consumed
by the poor even if they have not paid any taxes
to finance these goods)
5Regressive elements of tax, transfer and spending
system
- E.g. Taxes on beer and tobacco (poor spend a much
higher proportion of their income on these goods
than the rich) - Regressive taxes show redistribution from the
poor to the rich.
6 - Tax incidence is the final tax burden once we
allow for all induced effects of a tax.
7 - Tax wedge is a gap between the price paid by the
buyer and the price received by the seller. - The more inelastic the supply curve and the more
elastic the demand curve, the more the final tax
incidence will fall on the seller rather than the
purchaser.
8 - Extreme casesupply (SS) completely inelastic
- With no tax E-equilibrium,W-wage
- New equilibrium A and new wage W
- Only if the gross wage is unchanged firms will
demand quantity L that is supplied, so the wage
obtained by employee is lowered to W- entire
incidence of the tax falls on the workers. -
9 - DD-demand curve,
- SS-supply (without tax)
- E-equilibrium without income tax,
- After imposing income tax
- DD- unchanged,
- SS-supply of labour in terms of gross or
tax-inclusive wage (workers preferences are
unchanged but they are interested in net-of-tax
wage), - E-new equilibrium, W-gross wage,L-workers
(net-of-tax wage at which workers supply L) - The wage paid by employer raised(from W to W)
but the wage obtained by the worker lowered (from
W to W)
10Taxation, efficiency and waste
11Taxation, efficiency and waste
12Must taxes distort?
13Must taxes distort?
- When either the demand or supply curve is very
inelastic, a tax leads to small change in
equilibrium
14Cigarettes in UK
15- Consumers act as they were taking into account
the externality
16Taxation and supply-side economics
17- Supply-side economics analyses how taxes and
other incentives affect national output when the
economy is at full capacity.
18- The Laffer curve shows how much tax revenue is
raised at each possible tax rate.
19 20Purposes and effects of taxation
21Funds provided by taxation are used to carry out
the functions such as
- military defense,
- enforcement of law and public order,
- protection of property,
- redistribution of wealth,
- economic infrastructure roads, legal tender,
enforcement of contracts, etc., - public works,
- the operation of government itself.
22Most governments also use taxes to fund welfare
and public services, such as
- education systems,
- healthcare systems,
- pensions for the elderly,
- unemployment benefits,
- energy, water and waste management systems,
- public transportation.
23- Each tax has
- subject,
- object,
- base,
- rate,
- date,
- method of payment.
24Main taxes in Poland
- Corporate Income Tax (CIT)
- VAT (Tax on Goods and Services)
- Excise Duty
- Tax on Dividends
- Personal Income Tax (PIT)
- Inheritance and Gifts Tax
- Tax on civil and legal proceedings
- Stamp duty
- Local Taxes
25PIT
26Aims
- Diminish the disproportion progressive tax rate
- Supporting important social aims (building family
homes, education, culture, charity, economical
enterprises, creating working places) - Profamiliar policy
- Savings protection are tax-free
27 - Legal base for collection of personal income tax
is the statue from 26 July 1991 -
28What is subjected to taxation?
- Salaries
- Pensions, disability payments
- Rewards
- Subsidies for unemployed
- Others
- Earnings in the country as well as abroad !
29Determining the tax rates
30Tax rates (2005)
31Who pays?
- Everyone ho has some income. Exceptions concern
very low one (the cost of collecting the tax
would be improportionally high to the amount of
tax itself)
32Tax base
- Sum of taxable incomes from all the sources
- Where taxable income is positive difference
between all the money gained and the expenses for
gaining them
33Not taxable incomes
- National awards
- Disability payments for soldiers disabled during
the war - Compensations from personal insurance
- Interests on savings
- Allowances from social-care, for rehabilitation
34Two ways of diminishing the tax
- Find the expenses that can be subtracted from tax
base? - ( Ex. Medicines, guides, usage of the car for
disabled person - Donations for charity organisations)
- We cant subtract from the income the sum
which was already taken into account for
diminishing the tax base!
- Which expenses can be subtracted from the tax?
- (E.g. Renovation of installations
- Expenses for social organisations.)
35Basic features of PIT
- Direct
- Ordinary
- Obligatory
- Calculated by taxpayers
- National (increases the budged of the country)
36Corporate Income Tax
37Content
- CIT- what is it?
- How much?, sanctions...
- CIT forms
38What is it?
- Tax payable by
- legal entities, including limited liability
companies and joint stock companies, and tax
capital groups.
39- In 2002, the overall number of payers of
corporate income tax amounted to 220,356. - The main legal act regulating CIT is the Act on
Corporate Income Tax that has been in force since
1 January 1992.
40When and possible sanctions?
- taxpayer counts, declares and delivers the tax to
be paid on his own - Not delivered - punishment
- Mistake correction form
41Where is the taxpayer registered?
- Taxpayers with their registered office or
management board located - subjected to the
taxation of all revenue, regardless of their
origin. - Taxpayers who do not have a registered office or
the management board located - liable for payment
of taxes only on the revenue obtained in Poland.
42How much???
- Tax rates
- 1997 r. 38 1998 r. 36
- 1999 r. 34 2000 r. 30
- 2001 r. 28 2002 r. 28
- 2003 r. 27 2004 r. 19
- 2005 r. 19
43 - European Union
- The countries which entered European
- Union in 2004 21
- The rest 31
44USA
- Small business lt-gt big business
- CAT
- Minimum, maximum tax
45Canada (Province of British Columbia)
- General Rate
- July 1, 2005 to present 12.0
- January 1, 2002 to June 30, 2005 13.5
- July 1, 1993 to December 31, 2001 16.5
- Small Business Rate
- Applicable for Canadian controlled private
corporations with active business income. - January 1, 2001 to present 4.5
- July 1, 2000 to December 31, 2000 4.75
- July 1, 1999 to June 30, 2000 5.5
- January 1, 1999 to June 30, 1999 8.5
46Losses
47Losses
- Losses can be carried forward for up to five
years, though no more than 50 of the loss can be
written off in any year. In this way the
government is helping new enterprises, which
might suffer early losses.
48Poland
- In 2002, the revenue raised from CIT amounted to
15,008.4 million PLN and exceeded the estimated - revenue by 8.5.
49Budget 2006
50Budget 2006
51CIT forms
52CIT forms
- CIT-S the income established by the company in
the special economical zone - CIT-D information about donations
- CIT-9 income from exporting goods abroad
- CIT-8 income established by the taxpayer
- CIT-8_O information about the relieves in paying
taxes and about the income free of being taxed - CIT-8_A,B declaration about the income made by
the tax capital group
53CIT forms
- CIT-7 information about the income from profits
from dividends - CIT-6,6 A declaration about the tax taken from
shared profits with legal persons - CIT-5 the declaration about the allocation of
profits from dividends - CIT-2 declaration about the losses
- CIT-2_O information about relieves
- CIT-2_A,B declaration about the amount of money
losen by the capital group
54CIT forms
- CIT-11 declaration about the income from
dividends - CIT-10 declaration about the income obtained by
legal persons who havent registered in Poland - IFT-2,IFT-2_R information about the income made
abroad
55(No Transcript)
56VAT (Value Added Tax)
- Tax on Goods and Services
- Indirect tax
- basic rate 22 (standard rate),
- preferential rate 7 (e.g vegetables, meat,
fish, bread, books)
57Excise duty
- For luxury products,
- rate depends on the kind of goods, as well as on
the origin of the good
58Inheritance and Gifts Tax
- progressive rate and its level depends on the
character of relation between donor and recipient - base of taxation the market value of goods and
property rights acquired through inheritance,
donation and prescription
59Tax on civil and legal proceedings
- E.g
- 1. Sales contract
- a) connected with real estate 2
- b) other rights 1
- 2. exchange contract, donation,etc.
- a) connected with real estate 2
- b) other rights 1
- 3. contract of lease 2
60Local Taxes
- Local taxes and fees include real estate tax,
vehicle tax, dog tax, and market tax.