Willingness to Pay — Taxes, Rent
Louis Post: Outlines of Louis F. Post's
Lectures,
with Illustrative Notes and Charts (1894)
The shifting of indirect taxes is accomplished by means of their tendency
to increase the prices of commodities on which they fall. Their magnitude
and incidence 6 are thereby disguised. It was for this reason that a great
French economist of the last century denounced them as "a scheme for
so plucking geese as to get the most feathers with the least squawking."7
7. Though his language was blunt, the sentiment does not
essentially differ from that of "statesmen" of our day who
meet all the moral and economic objections to indirect taxation with
the one
reply that the people
would not consent to pay enough or the support of government if public
revenues were collected from them directly. This means nothing but
that the people
are actually hoodwinked by indirect taxation into sustaining a government
that they would not support if they knew it was maintained at their
expense; and instead of being a reason for continuing indirect taxation,
would,
if true, be one of the strongest of reasons for abolishing it. It is
consistent neither with the plainest principles of democracy nor the
simplest conceptions
of morality. ... read the book
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