Taxing the fried cheese
2010-03-03
There's really no such thing as a "fair" tax, given the amount of
theft and waste in the public-sector budgets. Taxpayers always
get back less collectively than they put in. It's possible, though,
to reduce the degree of unfairness by eliminating tax breaks that
grossly favor certain individuals or groups over others. If Czech
politicians acted in the interest of fairness and reason in
addressing the hot issue of employee benefits, the
transportation strike planned for tomorrow could be avoided.
Free vacations to sunny destinations and multimillion-crown
life-insurance policies shouldn't receive special tax treatment,
but it's quite reasonable for a company to be able to provide
simple meals or the products it produces to employees at a
discount without making a big tax issue out of it. Why can't ODS
understand this? It's promising low taxes, less bureaucracy and
a "return to our roots" in its Vision 2020, but its vision for
employee benefits is to squeeze out a few extra crowns of VAT
every time a worker buys fried cheese in the company canteen.
[Czech Republic value-added tax]
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