Originally posted by: PaperclipGod
Originally posted by: BigDH01
I'm not following your logic. How does a tax on profit increase production costs? Firms are taxed when the product is sold, not produced.
Therefore, it is still in the company's best interest to earn as much revenue as possible. This point would be unaffected by taxes levied after selling. Raising the price to try and maintain profit margins would still reduce overall profit.
Really, it might be best just to break open an Econ book and brush up.
Right, but taxes take a predictable percentage of profits, thus they can be calculated into a businesses operating expenses. And if that business is selling something, the cost of that item must go up to fund the increased expense.
Imagine yourself selling watches on a street corner in NYC. You've got a suitcase full, and you know that you need to make $100 that day to survive - $75 to cover the cost of the watches, and $25 to feed yourself. However, there's a big guy with a baseball bat watching you, and he says that for "protection" you owe him 40% of the profit on every sale. Now, originally, you could have sold your suitcase of watches - let's say there's 10 in there - at $10 each and made your $100. That's the cheapest you can sell them for and still eat. Now, however, because you owe Guido $1 for every $2.50 you earn, you'll be $10 short for the day.
Knowing this, however, you proactively raise the price of your watches to $11.75. Instead of making $2.50 on each watch, you're now making $4.25. 40% of that goes to our Soprano-wannabe, leaving us with our initial $2.50 profit per watch. So now we can still feed ourselves and afford to give Guido his protection money. Who pays the extra, though? The people buying my watches.
If I were the only one on the street who Guido was offering to "protect", I'd go out of business. However, since Guido and his pals are pretty well organized, they've got someone out "protecting" every watch-seller in NYC, and they're each extracting the same amount of protection money -- so everyone's prices go up, but by an equal amount, so they'll all remain competitive.
So, the point here is that prices will rise as a response to the increased expense, no matter what word is used to describe the expense. Since taxes are not unique to each company (we tax by type of entity, not randomly), the burden is equal for each company - to cover expenses, prices must increase. Since the prices either go up, or the business goes under, everyone increases their prices.
Simply expanding production to cover the decreased profit per item isn't a viable alternative, since demand is finite.