Tax deduction card

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Tax deduction card is an operationalisation of tax exemptions or deductions. Usually, tax deductions are made from income tax so that the employee gets the benefit from the tax deduction. There are problems related to the current system:

  • Tax deductions can only be made from the income tax but not from e.g. value added tax.
  • The total tax paid from a certain amount of work done and salary paid is dependent on the other income of the employee. From the employer's point of view, this should not be the case.

These problems can be avoided by using the tax deduction card approach. In this approach, all taxation is treated in the same systematic way. Tax is considered as a payment that someone who buys a service pays to the society. The amount of tax is determined by the price and nature of the service only. The employer buys service from the employee, and therefore the employer, not the employee, is seen as the taxpayer. The tax is a fixed percentage of the salary paid, determined in a political process.

The purpose of tax deductions is societal, i.e. the society wants to support certain individuals due to their low income, difficult life situation, or other reasons. There is no particular reason (except tradition) to limit tax deductions to income tax only. Each individual should be exempted to a certain amount of tax, determined by the the societal reasons mentioned above. This deduction should be available to the individual when he/she is paying any kind of tax. To make this possible in practice, all taxpayers are given a tax deduction card. It is like a credit card containing information about the amount of tax deduction the person has available. When he/she buys services or goods, h/she can show the card when paying, and a part of the tax deduction is applied to the tax included in the service. The usage of exemption is recorded into the card account, so there is little less exemption to be used after the purchase.

The tax exemption card can also be used to implement a tax progression. Depending on the yearly income (or other criteria, determined by the country's policy), an individual may be eligible to 100% reduction of tax up to a certain amount of tax; after that, he/she is further eligible to 80% reduction of tax up to another amount of tax; then 60% reduction, and so on, until no tax deductions are available. Depending on the individual's total income, he/she will be able to utilise a smaller or larger part of the theoretical tax deduction. Of course, in a case where the individual cannot use all the deductions, he will make sure that all the best deductions (i.e. those that give 100% reduction of the tax) are maximally used before using the second best 80% reductions.

The tax deduction card approach is a generalisation of the current progressive income tax - proportional value added tax system. Exactly the current tax percentages can be implemented, but it also possible to develop a tax system that is neutral to the type of income. This has often been seen as a major problem at least in the current Finnish tax system: income tax is generally clearly higher than the capital gains tax