Tax System and Its Principles
Need for Tax System
“Government cannot function without levying taxes on citizens. The principal purpose of taxation is to finance public expenditure. Taxation constitutes an involuntary saving by taxpayers which is diverted to government for use in resource allocation”. (Michael Howard)
Taxation is a system used by the government to collect taxes from people and businesses and tax liability is based on their income, assets, or transaction values. The most important purpose of taxation is to raise revenue for the government. Government raises tax money for performing various activities such as:
- Financing government spending (most important purpose),
- Demand management during inflationary or recessionary conditions in the economy by increasing or reducing taxes, respectively,
- Redistributing income through a progressive, regressive or proportional taxation system, and
- Correcting market failures to produce the socially optimum level of output.
It is clear that a government uses the tax system to fulfill its obligations and achieve some pre-determined objectives. Hence, a need arises to evaluate whether government remain successful in its purpose or not. In other words, it is important to evaluate whether the tax system results in achievement of desired objectives or not for the government.
Principles of Taxation
In this context, there are various principles of taxation which are meant to guide a government in designing and implementing a taxation regime in the light of its objectives and obligations. These are as follows:
- Adequacy: taxes should be just-enough to generate revenue required for provision of essential public services.
- Broad Basing: taxes should be spread over as wide as possible section of the population, or sectors of economy, to minimize the individual tax burden.
- Compatibility: taxes should be coordinated to ensure tax neutrality and overall objectives of good governance.
- Convenience: taxes should be enforced in a manner that facilitates voluntary compliance to the maximum extent possible.
- Earmarking: tax revenue from a specific source should be dedicated to a specific purpose only when there is a direct cost-and-benefit link between the tax source and the expenditure, such as use of motor fuel tax for road maintenance.
- Efficiency: tax collection efforts should not cost an inordinately high percentage of tax revenues.
- Equity: taxes should equally burden all individuals or entities in similar economic circumstances.
- Neutrality: taxes should not favor any one group or sector over another, and should not be designed to interfere-with or influence individual decisions-making.
- Predictability: collection of taxes should reinforce their inevitability and regularity.
- Restricted Exemptions: tax exemptions must only be for specific purposes (such as to encourage investment) and for a limited period.
- Simplicity: tax assessment and determination should be easy to understand by an average taxpayer.
Out of these principles, the equity and efficiency principles are very important. These are discussed below in detail.
Read More in: Theory of Public Finance
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- Role of Government in Economy
- Role of Government in Mixed Economy: Public & Private Sector
- Role of Government under Cooperation and Competition
- Role of Government in Economic Development and Planning
- Concept of Public Goods, Private Goods, and Merit Goods
- Concept of Market Failure and Functions of Government
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Decreasing Costs
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Externalities
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Public Goods
- Future Market: Meaning, Role & Uncertainty
- Concept of Information Asymmetry
- Theory of Second Best: Concept & Explanation
- Problem of Allocation of Resources: Public & Private Mechanisms
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- Economic Theory of Democracy: Concept & Explanation
- Politico Eco Bureaucracy: Concept & Explanation
- Rent-Seeking and Directly Unproductive Profit-Seeking Activities
- Rationale for Public Goods: Concept & Explanation
- Benefit Theory or Voluntary Exchange Theory
- Lindahl Model: Concept, Equilibrium & Limitations
- Bowen Model: Concept, Advantages & Limitations
- Samuelson’s Model of Public Expenditure
- Musgrave’s Model of Public Expenditures
- Demand Revealing Schemes for Public Goods
- Vickery-Clarke-Groves Mechanism
- Groves-Ledyard Mechanism
- Tiebout Model: Concept, Assumptions Equilibrium & Simple Tiebout Model
- Theory of Club Goods
- Keynesian Principles of Stabilization Policy
- Difference Between Keynesian Economic Thought and Others
- Role of Expectations and Uncertainty in Formulating Stabilization Policy
- Intertemporal Markets Efficiency & Failure
- Liquidity Preference Theory
- Diamond-Dybvig Banking Model
- Preference Shocks, Adverse Selection & Central Bank
- Equilibrium Deposit Contract
- Social Goods and Its Effect on Stabilization Policy
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- Effect of Regional Imbalances on Stabilization Policy
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- Pure Theory of Public Expenditure
- Structure & Growth of Public Expenditure in India
- Trends, Lessons & Priorities in Public Expenditure in India
- Social Cost-Benefit Analysis: Project Evaluation, Estimation of Costs & Discount Rate
- Performance Based Budgeting and Zero Based Budgeting
- Theories of Tax Incidence: Concentration Theory, Diffusion Theory & Modern Theory
- Tax System and Its Principles
- Equity Principle and Efficiency Principle of Taxation: Meaning, Explanation & Examples
- Ability to Pay and Benefits Received Principle of Taxation
- Theory of Optimal Taxation: Excess Burden & Distortions of Taxation
- Deadweight Loss of Taxation: Causes, Measurement & Example
- Concept of Equity & Efficiency in Economics
- Trade-Off Between Equity and Efficiency: Meaning & Example
- Theory of Measurement of Dead Weight Loss
- Double Taxation: Meaning, Desirability, Forms & Solution
- Solution to Problem of Double Taxation: Intra-Country & International
- Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) and Indian Policy
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- Compensatory Aspect of Public Debt Policy
- Public Debt or Borrowings: Concept, Need, Sources & Types
- Concept of Public Debt or Public Borrowings
- Need for Public Debt or Public Borrowing
- Sources of Public Debt
- Classification of Public Debt
- Burden of Public Debt: Meaning, Types & Explanation
- Debt Through Created Money or Deficit Financing
- Public Debt (Public Borrowings) and Inflation (Price Level)
- Crowding Out of Private Investment and Activity
- Principle of Public Debt Management and Debt Repayment