One of the main complaints I have about taxation in developed nations is the obfuscation. I have no problem with a progressive income tax, but the established amendments of such policy with deductions, exemptions, and credits makes the entire system a mess. Furthermore, too many people are just oblivious to their actual tax contributions when factoring in local, state, and federal demands. I'll use an average Texas citizen as an example. I'll also ignore payments to the government for tangible products like driver's licenses.
Let's say Jane makes $50,000 a year. She has to contribute about 8% of that to payroll taxes. Now, one could argue that she eventually receives benefits from this levy when she retires and qualifies for Social Security/Medicare, but the fact remains she has lost 8% of her income for that year. Furthermore, she will pay about 13% of her gross salary towards the federal income tax. Are we done?
Nope. She will lose about 8% of her salary to the sales tax - assuming that she's only saving about 10% of her monthly paycheck. If she owns a house, about 2% of the value of her house also must be paid. Let's say she lives in a modest $175,000 estate. That translates to about $3,000 on top of her mortgage and insurance payments.
Altogether, she's paying about 38% of her income towards taxes. This is an average citizen, not an outstandingly wealthy individual. I think that's just atrocious. I would be satisfied with paying about half of that amount, but she's essentially forgone half of her income if you consider hidden taxes (like petroleum taxes).
This thread is devoted mostly to American citizens. I feel that culturally we are more intolerant of taxes and public programs. Do you think the actual contributions to taxes should be made more public to stir unrest?
Yes, taxes are necessary, and the GOP really doesn't care about cutting taxes if you make less than a few hundred thousand dollars, but the Democrats are always silent on issues of taxation beyond limited involvement (Obama/SS tax increase). In particular there's a noticeable lack of concern for the tax burden middle-class people face. Regular citizens are giving up nearly half of their paychecks in return for corporatism, militarism, police brutality... If you want to champion the regular working man (or woman), you need to defend drastically reducing the size and scope of government, even if you believe it does have a purpose in social welfare. I can't provide hard figures as it's a fluid point of discussion, but I don't think someone making $50,000 a year should be contributing more than $10,000 towards taxes. Now imagine the uproar and discontent if you were required to pay one tax (20%) all at once.