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Willy, son of Willy's avatar

"First, under the current VAT scheme that prevails in many countries, these activities are already taxed and very often at the standard rate. Since the VAT would disappear in a world with a PCT, everything else equal, the poorest households would pay less for them (since they would not pay any tax at all) than what they pay now."

This is not an argument for PCT, but for your particular version of it. You could easily imagine a PCT with a bottom rate equal to the current VAT. Not only you could imagine, but I also think it's more likely to be implemented.

As for your version of PCT, if you want to replace both income tax and VAT, you have no bottom rate and want to preserve revenue you'd need to significantly increase the rate for middle and upper income. Which means your proposal is basically PCT plus cash transfer. I'm in favor of that. But I say this because you combined 2 different things and PCT does not have the property of being better for the poorest, you just combined it with something else that does.

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Jason S.'s avatar

It’s not exactly clear whether the principle “equal pay for equal work” really is “the only universally recognized principle of economic justice.”

If justice is to mean anything I would also include “luck, which is pervasive in economic life (and in life in general), should be shared by all to the extent that everyone enjoys at least a basic level of dignity, security and care”.

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