Income taxes can be made progressive. Sales taxes are almost always regressive. Businesses need to do a lot more paperwork to document these taxes.
Why don't leftist parties campaign to abolish sales taxes and replace the lost revenue with an increase in a progressive income tax?
Am I missing some critical functionality of sales taxes that income taxes cannot replicate?
Edit: Here's an important feature of sales taxes that a few commentators helped me realize. It's better if we think of a sales tax as a "revenue tax" instead. Let's say we are in a country with multiple provinces. A business sells stuff in province A. However, the business and its owners are both located in province B. If sales tax didn't exist, then all money earned by the business would go to province B's government. Province A cannot enact tariffs and stuff like that. Thus, it puts up a "revenue tax" that is taxed to business for all revenue earned, i.e., a sales tax.
For those wondering, no, a corporate tax is not a revenue tax. It's a tax on profit. Non profits for example, do not pay any corporate tax, but they do pay sales tax (which is basically, revenue tax).
I lost you here. How would taxing capital gains affect pensions? Surely a carveout can be made. There's a difference between (in most countries) mandatory pension plans, index funds and $200k in stocks in the hands of one individual. It's not as if these are indistinguishable.
A system doesn't need to be purpusefully designed against a group for it to cause carm against the group. And the system can be mended and modeled to lower the discrimination caused (or to create positive discrimination).
You do have a point. But, the current system isn't here from "time immemorial". Things change, and they do so fast. Some change is inevitable. And the key to making sure "can we just" doesn't happen is active participation in the discourse.
Oh I am with you regarin both the need for change as well as the potential - I only focus on the question of income vs sales tax structure and abolishing one of the two withouz deeper adjustments.
The pensioner example in more detail, I'm using wrong numbers to make it easier for me :)
I am a pensioner with 100k in my pension fund (which st least where I'm from is treated similar to any other stock fund). I get 1000 Euro out of that per month in capital gain. I would have a 300 Euro tax on that. which I use to pay off my student loan, a consumer loan from a past mistake and the rest of a loan for my flat. I live from my state pension which allows me to barely scrape by.
If I can get tax exempt for paying of my (imo ridiculous) student loan and the rest im fine. How if I have to pay the tax on top of that I'm suddenly 300 Euro down. The social system says "that's a bad thing, people should have something from their money so we allow them to get tax credits for past debts - after all they did consume for that money and this helps the economy overall".
Now rich asshole scipiti comes around and says: yo bank, I earn too much, give me 60mio credit, here's the future capital gain and the stocks as security. Oh and tax man: I can't pay any taxes because I have to serve this 60mio credit which I used for my second yacht.
What most states do is now make rules which give more details on what can be exempt under which circumstances. But rich me does a quick calculation and it's way better to pay very smart people to figure out how can I still abuse the system. that's why we can't simply close loopholes: a) there might be side effects and that's a scary thought for law makers. b) we still want certain people to benefit and it's still worth it for them to benefit even though there is abuse. And sadly c) the incentive to close them is really low as the benefit is low on average for all voters but the pushback I get from the abusers is really big (imagine Elon musks money gets distributed evenly among every citizen of a state where one of his businesses resides vs the damage he can cause to any political individual).
I left the economic discussion btw completely as this is more speculation and political behavioral pattern observation in not exactly equal parts.
God, that seems horrible.
I don't get taxes on index funds themselves - you don't "own" anything - it's basically a savings account that (in general) actually gives you something other than bajillions of a cent.
And there's no sense in taxing you on what you already own (what you paid in). Especially on pension funds. Selling stock directly is a different matter, but that is done by the fund. They shouldn't be passing this down onto you, nor should the government double-tax. Why don't casinos charge capital gains when you cash out? Or stores charge you for gift cards?
Actually casinos so tax you on the US!
And it's not tax on the owning part but tax on the regular payments you receive from your funds. Think of the thanks stock buybacks or more simple yearly profit shares (dividends).
What you describe ironically is something France tried a but as and Germany is discussing every couple of years: a tax not on income but in wealth. It's as you described really tough to do right though from what I understand, again because it's so easy to evade.
Overall an interesting but kind of depressing topic to be honest.