eetrojan
Pattern Altitude
No I can't compensate for your lack of ability to understand the simple concept that nothing exists on it's own in commerce.
Oh well. I sincerely tried to understand you. If you change your mind, I'll be here.
No I can't compensate for your lack of ability to understand the simple concept that nothing exists on it's own in commerce.
I don't doubt your sincerity. Perhaps the folks at 920-452-7729 can help.Oh well. I sincerely tried to understand you. If you change your mind, I'll be here.
I don't doubt your sincerity. Perhaps the folks at 920-452-7729 can help.
That's what I'm here for...just to charm you.Charming.
So tell us again about how these businesses exist in a vacuum and no infrastructure is required for their existence and they receive no benefit from government action. This is the same old myopic argument against taxes that folks have made for centuries. Render unto Caesar and all that.
You are ignoring the transient nature of the clientele and the extra services they require. But then you know that and are just ignoring it for the sake of argument.They pay property tax on land and buildings (and at times also on tools and inventory). That should do.
You are ignoring the transient nature of the clientele and the extra services they require. But then you know that and are just ignoring it for the sake of argument.
Good for you. Just don't carry that denial of reality into your flying. Or not, your call entirely.You're right, sock it to them! Put more taxes on the food they buy, the gas they buy, the jobs they create, set up some toll roads - heck, tax all of it some more. Maybe they'll hurry back next year...?
That argument is absurd. I'm done, this thread has passed into the ridiculous. I'm going flying.
Jay- some points:Thank you. I was hoping someone would point out the obvious connection between this usurious tax and our lost income due to it being imposed.
Prices are always set at the maximum the market will bear at any given time. Being on a seasonal vacation destination island, I literally need a graph to tell you our room rates on any given day. The same room that is $69/night in November is $179 tonight, and these prices are set very carefully based on many historical factors. They are also highly fluid, based on many factors, including (among other things) weather.
All with a hefty 13% tax added on. If you don't think consumers are price sensitive to the cost INCLUDING THAT TAX, I've got some real estate to sell you.
Consumers don't care about the breakdown of the bill -- they react to the total number, and make their buying decisions based on the whole. To illustrate, there is still one tax-free type of hotel stay known as "long-term". Each state specifies what this means, but it is usually a stay of 30 days or longer. Beyond that, the state stops taking the 13%.**
Each winter, we fill up with snowbirds (AKA: "Winter Texans" who pay a deeply discounted rate. The rooms that are $200/night (plus tax) during the season will rent for as little as $800/month in the winter -- tax free.
Last year we tried to raise those long-term prices for the first time since we opened in 2010. We raised them just $50 per month...
...and sat empty. The Winter Texans are the perfect example of the price sensitive consumer, being on fixed incomes. A price increase of just over $1 per day caused them to look elsewhere.
We quickly dropped the price back to $800 -- and filled back up. It was a remarkable illustration of the immutable law of supply and demand, and price elasticity.
People who say "oh, that tax is on all of your competitors, so it has no impact on your bottom line" are inadvertently highlighting their lack of real world experience in business. Without that tax, the price would be EXACTLY the same -- the maximum the market will bear -- but we would get to keep it as regular income, and would therefore be able to use it for productive things -- like employee health insurance and benefits.
And airplanes.
** Hotel tax is 13% in Port Aransas. It was 12% in Iowa City. It is a whopping 17% in San Antonio.
If there's not a sale, there's no sales tax, but corporate taxes tax profits, not revenue. If expenses are more than revenue, there is no profit to tax. If Jay sells $1 million worth of hotel stays, his customers will have paid sales tax on that. But if he has $1 million in expenses, he isn't going to be paying corporate tax.
When you go to the store and buy a widget for $1 plus 4 cents sales tax, in your mind, do you figure you are paying the tax or is the merchant paying the tax?
I am. If the Merchant paid it, they'd go out of business. It passes through. In fact the scenario you describe is the most annoying thing ever. It's a $1 item and I need $2 to get it and then have a pocketful of change all day.
You are ignoring the transient nature of the clientele and the extra services they require. But then you know that and are just ignoring it for the sake of argument.
Sales tax covers Walmart. I understand you have no intelligent argument so you added the nonsense which comprised the rest of your post.Then why don't we put a gross receipts tax on Walmart ? A Walmart requires about 1.5FTE police coverage just to write theft and vandalism reports for the benefit of the company.
Here is the municipal taxing algorithm by which every mayor, city council member and state representative operates under:
It moves--> tax it
It doesn't move --> tax it
It poops --> tax it
Rain falls upon it --> tax it
People rent it --> tax it
Whether something takes more or less city resources does not determine whether something gets slapped with an extra tax. The only reason something gets taxed are:
- it exists
- there is no law against taxing it
Sales tax covers Walmart.
I like the pocketful of change, it all goes in a bowl on the dresser every evening (I never spend change). My bank has a (free) coin counter that I use when ever the bowl is full, to make a painless deposit. It covers the tax on my 3 vehicles every year . . . And I don't use cash very much anymore.
Yeah, it just screws up doing a to-the-penny budget and messes with my spreadsheets is all. I do the same thing with a jar but don't really feel like tracking the jar as a separate "account" in my budget.
Then why don't we put a gross receipts tax on Walmart?
Budget by the dollar, and use change as "extra" savings. From time to time, I'll add folding money, including any extra that I get selling things I make in my woodshop. Besides earning a pitiful amount of change, my wood lathe is great stress reduction!
Don't be coy.I didn't build what?
Let's do Jay's taxes!
So tell us again about how these businesses exist in a vacuum and no infrastructure is required for their existence and they receive no benefit from government action. This is the same old myopic argument against taxes that folks have made for centuries. Render unto Caesar and all that.
Don't be obtuse.Don't be coy.
I didn't say you were demanding no taxes Jay. I reminded you that your business benefits from what society has built. If you don't like the cost of that talk to your congress critters. Complaining here accomplishes nothing.I'm not sure how you made the leap from complaining about usurious taxes to demanding no taxes. That was never mentioned by me, or anywhere in this thread, to my knowledge.
If you think that the government should benefit more from my business than me, my wife, and all of my employees combined, well, that's your right. I don't.
I didn't say you were demanding no taxes Jay. I reminded you that your business benefits from what society has built. If you don't like the cost of that talk to your congress critters. Complaining here accomplishes nothing.
The first three words of your post are correct.I don't think Jay can compensate for your lack of ability to understand the simple concept that rhetorically asking him to "tell us again .. how no infrastructure is required" is pretty much putting those words in his mouth. Classic strawman.
The first three words of your post are correct.
Where's Mom when you need her?Ha. Your straw man just fell over into a steaming pile of ad hominem.
A widget sells for $100. This price is based on a lot of stuff you learn in B-school. It covers the seller's costs, overhead, traditional margin, and market acceptance.
The Government assesses a tax as a percentage of the widget's selling price; for this example we'll use 13%. The buyer pays this tax in addition to the accepted widget price. So the bottom line price to the buyer is $113, and he accepts this as a fair trade for the widget.
Then the seller pays his business taxes and cries that the $13 should be his and he left money on the table because the buyer accepted the trade of his $113 for the widget.
I just have to scratch my head....
Yeah, so Jay and his cohort should press whatever legislative body controls the tax to level the playing field.Your example only results in zero affect on an individual seller when the tax is uniformly applied to all sellers, like a sales tax.
However, if there are competitors who don't pay the tax, think Airbnb, then those competitors can strategically position their price below $113. That would force Jay to lower his pre-tax price below $100 to compete, and make less profit, or lose the sale.
I'm sure the detrimental effect to Jay is less than the tax paid, maybe a lot less, but I scratch my head too at the assertion that only the guests pay the tax because that falsely implies that the hotel tax has zero effect on Jay.
ps. I'm not arguing the hotel tax is bad or there should be no taxes.
I didn't say you were demanding no taxes Jay. I reminded you that your business benefits from what society has built. If you don't like the cost of that talk to your congress critters. Complaining here accomplishes nothing.
If you think that the government should benefit more from my business than me, my wife, and all of my employees combined, well, that's your right..
I reminded you that your business benefits from what society has built.
Given the tax in question, it seems both parties do this. Jay had to pay a similar tax and amount in Iowa too.That is the new democrats. Used to be called socialism. The name has been changed to make it sound nicer. I never bought into it either.
Well, they are protected too. But property tax pays for these things (in most places). However, note post #135 which lists how the "occupancy tax" is used (some portion of it at least). The problem is that some places (Air B&B, for example) benefit from the beach and Chamber of Commerce without paying to support those things. A fair question is whether Jay gets any value from collecting the tax from his customers.It is an absurd argument that the roads, police, and fire protection are special favors to business owners who have an obligation to pay it back.