DeityDude:
When a sales tax is added to the cost of a good, the cost of the good never increases by as much as the tax. This implies that the cost of the tax is being paid, to an extent, by the retailer. The reason the sales price does not increase by as much as the tax is simply supply and demand economics, it is not a choice of the retailer to absorb the cost - it is an action forced upon it, to absorb the cost is the only way to remain competitive.
It therefore follows that sales taxes reduce the profit margin of the retailer. As a profit margin for a retailer (e.g a personal business) is identical to income, sales tax is affecting the income of the retailer in much the same way as an income tax as the payment of such a tax is entirely unavoidable and involuntary.
When a sales tax is added to the cost of a good, the cost of the good never increases by as much as the tax. This implies that the cost of the tax is being paid, to an extent, by the retailer. The reason the sales price does not increase by as much as the tax is simply supply and demand economics, it is not a choice of the retailer to absorb the cost - it is an action forced upon it, to absorb the cost is the only way to remain competitive.
It therefore follows that sales taxes reduce the profit margin of the retailer. As a profit margin for a retailer (e.g a personal business) is identical to income, sales tax is affecting the income of the retailer in much the same way as an income tax as the payment of such a tax is entirely unavoidable and involuntary.
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