The Tory party of England is punishing Farmers, and reducing subsidies. It has come up with public money for public good. Now is the time to apply this to taxation.
Stonking profits hidden in offshore accounts is not fair or equitable. Tax should be flexible and for the common good, after all, that is its intention. Every company gets charges the same corporation tax at 20% , even struggling companies that do good.
For example Macdonald's. This company encourages a throw away society. Packaging can be found 10 miles from the store thrown in a hedgerow. They exploit the local community that has to pay for the clean up. A company that lets others clean up its mess gets large band taxation 50% plus. They can get a bit of relief if they can prove containers bought and containers recycled. They have to recycle not allowing a community to do it. If after a few years of trading and no change, then a hike in taxation.
Social network sites, don't you just love the adds and the inappropriate links to other sites to look at. They get many complaints of inappropriate sites and conduct but do little to protect clients. Every complaint should be a tax revenue stream the more complaints, the more tax. They would soon become compliant and serve customer needs not profit from scammers and abusers.
Energy companies, they hammer the poor, so hammer them. They will get relief for aid to poor households and ethical trading. Hit with high taxation they may feel trading in the UK is not that profitable, Good. Power transmission can be handed back to the UK government.
Transportation, rail is best and better in public hands. No subsidies for companies just fair taxation Maintaining unprofitable routes gets a bonus. Links between towns and cities not just London good,
everything into London and out again Bad.
Supermarkets: Food: local short food miles, good, bulk bought shipped to warehouse then shipped back out to where it was grown , bad, and taxed accordingly.
A good taxation system will encourage ethical standards and a benefit for all.
No comments:
Post a Comment