Originally posted by aeolium
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Originally posted by aeolium
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You are, of course, correct in stating that it will always be possible for individuals and companies "to outwit legislators and law enforcement agencies" but you tell this in a loaded way by referring only to wealthy ones whereas in fact anyone can do it and most people do, or at least they try. As I've stated before, those who make contributions to pensions and other savings schemes that embrace government-sponsored tax avoidance do it and the fellow that I mentioned who engineered his affairs in order that he could manage on a substantially reduced income has done it; in the latter case, it could be argued that, in spending considerable sums of his own money protecting himself from the taxman by arranging matters in order that he could manage on less income, thereby deliberately exonerating himself from the obligation to make the contribution to society that he would otherwise have had to make, he has outwitted legislators and law enforcement agencies just as have those wealthy individuals and corporations who adopt tax avoidance schemes to protect their own interests. The difference, however, is that no law states - or indeed could state - that each individual must make sufficient income to oblige him/herself to pay at least a certain sum in tax. The freedom to manage on less income is therefore wholly commensurate with the duty of the individual to pay as little tax as possible - i.e. the correct amount due by law; it is up to each of us to determine, as far as is possible, how much income we take.
I have paid less tax than has been demanded of me on several occasions, but this has always been through negotiation with the taxman as a consequence of a belief that I had been incorrectly assessed, which I had been on each such occasion; the amounts were small in each case, but had I done nothing about it and simply paid what I'd been asked to pay, it is clear that I would have paid too much tax; by challenging these demands, however, i was able to avoid paying too much tax. There's no moral consequence of that - merely a legal and administrative one.
Originally posted by aeolium
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Originally posted by aeolium
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Originally posted by aeolium
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Likewise, it is important to remember that tax authorities have a duty to charge the least amounts of tax possible just as taxpayers have a duty to pay ditto; that's what's meant by the correct amounts of tax accordingly to the law. The entire moral argument about tax is immediately untenable when one realises that morals and moral obligations towards society are by nature far more of an idée fixe than any tax rates or demands that are determined solely by law from time to time and fluctuate according to many circumstances including government policies and prevailing economic conditions - one might paraphrase Wilde and think of this argument as the immutable in pursuit of the immeasurable.
Originally posted by aeolium
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I have undergone two tax investigations and hope never to have to suffer a third; in the first, which lasted for four months, it was found that I owed the taxman £19 and, as the taxman agreed that my underpayment had been down to its fault rather than mine, it generously agreed to waive not only any penalty and interest on the unpaid amount but the unpaid amount itself (I did tell you that tax avoidance isn't all about large amounts being avoided by the rich, didn't I!) and, in the second, which lasted almost a year, the outcome was the that taxman owed me nearly £500 which it paid, along with interest at a far lower rate that it charges those who have underpaid tax or paid it late (is that just?). Who paid for these investigations? Other taxpayers, of course!
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