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posted by LaminatorX on Saturday June 07 2014, @04:14AM   Printer-friendly
from the Sudden-Outbreak-of-Honesty dept.

BBC reported the UK's Office for National Statistics considered for the first time the contribution of the hidden-economy to the GDP:

For the first time official statisticians are measuring the value to the UK economy of sex work and drug dealing and they have discovered these unsavoury hidden-economy trades make roughly the same contribution as farming and only slightly less than book and newspaper publishers added together.
Illegal drugs and prostitution boosted the economy by £9.7bn equal to 0.7% of gross domestic product in 2009, according to the ONS's first official estimate.
A breakdown of the data shows sex work generated £5.3bn for the economy that year, with another £4.4bn lift from a combination of cannabis, heroin, powder cocaine, crack cocaine, ecstasy and amphetamines.

Joe Grice, chief economic adviser at the ONS, said: "As economies develop and evolve, so do the statistics we use to measure them. These improvements are going on across the world and we are working with our partners in Europe and the wider world on the same agenda.
"Here in the UK these reforms will help ONS to continue delivering the best possible economic statistics to inform key decisions in government and business."

Alan Clarke, a UK economist at Scotiabank, said that although the government would not feel the benefit of illegal work in terms of income tax take, there would be a spending boost.
"A drug dealer or prostitute won't necessarily pay tax on that £10bn, but the government will get tax receipts when they spend their income on a pimped up car or bling phone."

Keeping with the theme, I can "estimatedly project" two things from the above:

  1. if GDP is to include hidden-economy and beyond-damnd-liers have free reign to estimate it as they see fit, don't be surprised when the estimated rate of inflation and consequently your mortgage rate will vary in no relation with the as-reflected-by-your-payslip-economy
  2. if hidden-economy is officially recognized but still not taxed, where's the incentive for others to run their business in the open?

SN mates, what do you make of it?

 
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  • (Score: 2) by frojack on Saturday June 07 2014, @04:01PM

    by frojack (1554) on Saturday June 07 2014, @04:01PM (#52650) Journal

    You need to go read the FAQ on that.
    It might surprise you to find you are not the first person to have thought about that.

    Basically, its just not true. If you want to barter for used lumber, and salvaged bricks, go ahead, but in this world you have to buy stuff, and it doesn't matter if you use cash or credit cards. The lumber yard isn't going to risk getting seized for taxes just to give you an off the books deal.

    Taxes are already that high in many EU countries with Vat tacked on at each step in the production chain.

    Its still cheaper at the end of the day. No income tax, no other sales taxes.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 07 2014, @06:19PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 07 2014, @06:19PM (#52681)

    If that's the gist of the FAQ, I don't need to read it because it's only half the story. Sure, large well established businesses don't want to take that risk. But little guys will. For example, just because I can't register my car without paying property taxes on it doesn't stop my auto mechanic from giving me a significant discount for cash. There already is a big under-the-table economy and increasing the incentive to deal under the table sure ain't going to reduce it. In fact, dropping the requirement for income tax reporting will remove one of the biggest ways that tax cheats get caught because there won't be as many official records of money flow any more.

    When the argument is that a sales tax is easy to collect, it is wishful thinking to ignore how the tax itself will change behavior.

    • (Score: 1) by frojack on Saturday June 07 2014, @06:55PM

      by frojack (1554) on Saturday June 07 2014, @06:55PM (#52703) Journal

      What possible incentive is there for the Mechanic to accept ALL the risk to give you a discount for cash, when cash doesn't get taxed, doesn't have to be reported on income taxes, etc.

      Cash, credit, check, its all the same to him. It isn't tracked. His state authorities might look at his books, but that is only to make sure he is turning in all the tax he collected.

      So he skips charging you tax, pockets the money. Then what? He has to eat. He has rent to pay. He will SPEND his money. And that is where it gets taxed.

      To say you don't have to read the FAQ and then turn right around and suggest something so ignorant as paying in cash to be untrackable is just beyond the pale. Read the Faq: http://www.fairtax.org/site/PageServer?pagename=FAQs [fairtax.org]

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  • (Score: 2) by hankwang on Saturday June 07 2014, @06:44PM

    by hankwang (100) on Saturday June 07 2014, @06:44PM (#52698) Homepage

    "Taxes are already that high in many EU countries with Vat tacked on at each step in the production chain."

    Are you sure you know how VAT works? Effectively it is a tax of 21% (or whatever the local rate is) paid by the consumer at the end of the chain. For the businesses inside the chain, it is just some bookkeeping of incoming and outgoing VAT, but it doesn't add to their production costs.

    • (Score: 2) by frojack on Saturday June 07 2014, @06:58PM

      by frojack (1554) on Saturday June 07 2014, @06:58PM (#52708) Journal

      While VATs are also consumption taxes, and better than income taxes, the FairTax is not a VAT. A VAT works very differently. It taxes every stage of production. It is much more complex and is typically hidden from the retail consumer. Second, in industrialized countries that have a VAT, it coexists with high-rate income tax, payroll, and many other taxes that, in some instances, have led to marginal tax rates as high as 70 percent. Third, all other industrialized countries, except Australia and Japan, have a much larger tax burden than the U.S., which requires higher rates and makes tax administration much more difficult. Lastly, a VAT is a lobbyist’s dream, allowing them to install their loopholes unbeknownst to the purchaser.

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      • (Score: 2) by Reziac on Sunday June 08 2014, @02:50AM

        by Reziac (2489) on Sunday June 08 2014, @02:50AM (#52838) Homepage

        Some years ago when this topic came up, someone mentioned the VAT rates in Denmark, and how much it comes to. The upshot was that a car which sells for $15,000 in the U.S. sells for $42,000 in Denmark, the difference being the many layers of VAT.

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        • (Score: 2) by hankwang on Sunday June 08 2014, @10:55AM

          by hankwang (100) on Sunday June 08 2014, @10:55AM (#52912) Homepage

          the VAT rates in Denmark, and how much it comes to. The upshot was that a car which sells for $15,000 in the U.S. sells for $42,000 in Denmark, the difference being the many layers of VAT.

          You have been misinformed. VAT in Danmark is 25% of the consumer price, and this percentage is not stacked up (i.e., the layers will always add up to 25% of the consumer price). The one who told you this was probably confusing VAT ("Moms" in Danmark) with the vehicle registration tax, which is 105% to 180% [www.skat.dk]. Other European countries have different VRT systems, although the Danish VRT seems to be the highest. For example, Netherlands used to charge 45%, but moved to a VRT based on CO2 emissions per kilometer, e.g., zero VRT below 3.8 L/100 km gasoline usage, and 16 kEUR for a car that does 8 L/100 km (that's 5 mpg-US).

          • (Score: 2) by Reziac on Sunday June 08 2014, @02:43PM

            by Reziac (2489) on Sunday June 08 2014, @02:43PM (#52950) Homepage

            Does the VAT only apply to products made in-country? If so, to what degree has this causes manufacturing to move elsewhere?

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            • (Score: 2) by hankwang on Saturday June 14 2014, @07:45PM

              by hankwang (100) on Saturday June 14 2014, @07:45PM (#55382) Homepage

              Does the VAT only apply to products made in-country? If so, to what degree has this causes manufacturing to move elsewhere?

              (Late response, hadn't noticed this question) Business-to-business sales that cross borders are not subjected to VAT, although the seller (recipient of the money) has to keep track of the sales and the VAT registration number of the buyer and file this data with their local tax authorities. I assume that this is in order to discourage fraud.

              With business-to-consumer sales within the EU, the consumer pays VAT according to the rates in the country of the seller.

              With out-of-EU sales into the EU above some threshold, the consumer should pay VAT inside their own country. In Netherlands, usually the shipping company (UPS/DHL/etc.) handles the financial details upon delivery.

              I don't see how corporations could save on VAT expenses by moving manufacturing to elsewhere. As I said before, VAT is not an expense for corporations, just a book-keeping effort. VAT is paid by consumers on goods purchased in the EU. In theory, companies could offer slightly lower VAT-inclusive prices to consumers by shipping and selling from a low-VAT country like Luxembourg, which has 15% VAT compared to 19--25% for most of the EU. But I've never seen a web shop that does this; probably the international shipping costs make it not worth the trouble.

      • (Score: 2) by hankwang on Sunday June 08 2014, @10:30AM

        by hankwang (100) on Sunday June 08 2014, @10:30AM (#52909) Homepage

        A VAT works very differently. It taxes every stage of production. It is much more complex and is typically hidden from the retail consumer.

        It is not complex at all. A business entitity charges VAT to its customers (business or consumer) and pays VAT to their suppliers. The difference goes to the state tax collection agency; if the difference is negative, the business receives the difference. Only the consumer at the end of the chain, who does not sell any goods or services, is a net payer of VAT; for all the entities inside the chain, VAT payments and receipts cancel out. For interstate business-to-business transactions, no VAT is charged at all.

        Disclosure: I file VAT statements every quarter.