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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] Yes! Another argument about the GPL! You knew you wanted it....
- Date: Thu, 13 Aug 2009 02:05:39 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] Yes! Another argument about the GPL! You knew you wanted it....
- References: <4A78F7E1.6090101@example.com> <4A790441.4070605@example.com> <4A79111F.50003@example.com> <87y6pybf5l.fsf@example.com> <20090808194609.66f16c92@example.com> <20090811045233.GB28414@example.com> <20090811180622.4065da83@example.com> <20090812010055.GA4321@example.com> <1605A5FF-39E6-452F-A57E-043FEC4788D6@example.com> <87r5vhnqz9.fsf@example.com> <20090812143713.GB16205@example.com>
Curt Sampson writes: > Any business that collects more in VAT than it spends effectively > pays no VAT on anything. So even if VAT is "entirely collected from > businesses," isn't it fair to say that only consumers pay it? You're forgetting that anything that increases the price to consumers reduces quantity demanded. That in turn induces a tradeoff to you (the business), and you will lower your price to get *some*, but probably not all, of that demand back. IOW, if consumers respond to price increases by reducing demand, you cannot pass all of the tax through to them. So in fact who writes the check to the government doesn't matter at all, only the gross price paid by the consumer and the net price received by the firm, as compared to the equilibrium price with no tax. Basically, the side of the market which responds less to a change in price bears more of the burden of the tax. Speaking of Subsidies Department ================================ Application: since Toyota was already running at capacity, the ecocar thing cannot increase the number of Priuses sold. Thus the consumers will still be willing to pay the same amount, and the ecocar subsidy is a pure windfall to Toyota, because they can raise price (ie, refuse to discount the inflated MSRP) 1 yen for every yen of subsidy. In practice, they have to reduce price a little, because even Japanese people would get really pissed off if they realized that the most profitable firm in the country was being subsidized and they weren't getting any. In fact, Toyota is probably being jawboned into reducing prices significantly (viz being sold out until next April as of two weeks ago), but I bet this nevertheless provides a healthy boost to their bottom line.
- References:
- Re: [tlug] Zurus distributions experience
- From: Sotaro Kobayashi
- Re: [tlug] Zurus distributions experience
- From: Edward Middleton
- Re: [tlug] Zurus distributions experience
- From: Sotaro Kobayashi
- Re: [tlug] Zurus distributions experience
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
- Re: [tlug] Zurus distributions experience
- From: Lars Kotthoff
- [tlug] Yes! Another argument about the GPL! You knew you wanted it....
- From: Curt Sampson
- Re: [tlug] Yes! Another argument about the GPL! You knew you wanted it....
- From: Lars Kotthoff
- Re: [tlug] Yes! Another argument about the GPL! You knew you wanted it....
- From: Curt Sampson
- Re: [tlug] Yes! Another argument about the GPL! You knew you wanted it....
- From: JC Helary
- Re: [tlug] Yes! Another argument about the GPL! You knew you wanted it....
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
- Re: [tlug] Yes! Another argument about the GPL! You knew you wanted it....
- From: Curt Sampson
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