Import Duty
Categories: Tax, International
No, it's not an obligation to import. (Although we do need the oil...so, um, Saudis, thanks a tonne...and here's a few billion a month to pay for it.)
No. An import duty is just an import tax. Like...for every barrel of oil we import at our cost of, say, 40 bucks, we'll slap on a duty of 5 bucks.
Why? Well, we need the 5 bucks for Congressmen's mistresses' hotels. They're not cheap. (The hotels.) We also want to "protect" a bit our own U.S. domestic producers of oil. Like oil found near Mark Cuban's house in Dallas. So we make it a bit more expensive for producers of cars in Japan, and of wine in France, and of those little stackable Russian dolls...to sell them into the U.S. versus what these things cost in Japan, France, and Russia.
The U.S. has a modest Protectionist policy relative to the rest of the world. Import duties are kind of a trade weapon, and those weapons are scary. A few countries (think: Korea in telecom) only make a few things...well. And the U.S. is a huge buyer of, say, Samsung phones. If we tax the crap out of those phones to favor Apple, our own most-loved technological fruit, then Korea could be seriously economically damaged. So we try to be thoughtful about what taxes we are levying, where, and how.
Ugly things can happen when we're amiss. Even uglier than those stackable dolls.
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finance a la shmoop what is the eighty or VAT well it's this what okay then I
never mind Breaking Bad was awesome though anyway in finance land VAT or V.A.T[Car drives by financeland sign]
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rate on anything you buy in Massachusetts is say ten percent so you
think that car cost thirty grand no it was thirty three grand and you'll pay [Car on a driveway]
other v.a.t.s like a tax for your license plate registration and other
stuff note that the V and the A in their value-added yeah and it's a fair
question to ask value-added for whom and the answer is the government the taxman [Uncle Sam poster appears on wall]
v80 tax is that three dollar gallon of gas at the same rate for Bill Gates as
it does for Joe Sixpack it is a regressive tax that is rich in poor
people all pay the same rate and yes Bill Gates jet probably uses more gas [Bill Gates stood by a jet]
than does Joe six-packs but the rate per gallon is the same and this causes
controversy among various political factions who feel that it's wrong to tax [Political figures speaking on stage]
the poor at the same rate as the rich well when it comes to income tax the
rich are taxed vastly more not just in volumes of dollars taxed because they
earn more money but in the rate of tax applied like let's punish those
hard-working plumbing parts suppliers and reward the guy who's asleep at the [People using laptop on benches]
tollgate taking the five bucks like someone in a blue state making thirty
grand a year pays fifteen percent tax on their last dollar someone making 500
grand pays like fifty cents or half so over time a number of politicians have
suggested that v80 should somehow have an income level overlay that is the
buyer of a given gallon of gas should state what income tax bracket they're in [Man unscrewing gas knob]
when they go to the gas pump and that for Bill Gates that gallon should cost [Gas pump filling up car]
like thirty eight dollars whereas for the Union Tollbooth worker yeah wake up
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their gallon of gas fair not fair well ask the toll booth guy
you know when he wakes up [Toll both man sleeping]