http://harveyoberfeld.ca/blog/Far more eloquent than I am:
Those who don’t like the Hated Sales Tax complain it has all been based on a whole series of lies to the taxpayers:, the government lied when it said it was not on the table before the election; the government lied when it said it would be revenue neutral; the government lied when it said the HST would create 100,000 jobs; business lied when it said when it said the savings would flow back to the consumers in lower prices; and business is currently lying when it says taxpayers will “save” $120 under the new HST formula …when truth be told, the “average family” won’t “save” but ONLY be ripped off an EXTRA $230 by the tax, instead of the $350 a year the independent panel has estimated.
But no one has addressed what I see as the BIGGEST LIE put forward by the pro-HST forces.
That is; yes, the HST shifts the tax burden to consumers from business … but that is good, because business creates jobs and we will all benefit from that in the long run.
That is a TOTAL LIE!
Business does not create jobs: CONSUMERS CREATE JOBS!
Think about it. There is not a single product produced, mined, timbered, manufactured, grown or service created, marketed or sold WITHOUT consumer demand. Yes, CONSUMER demand!
Without consumers, there is NO business, no jobs, no revenues, no profits, no Whistler chalets, no Mercedes, no executive bonuses, no Vancouver Club memberships or Yacht Club slips.
And yet, if you listen to the governments, the HST advocates, corporate benefactors, and all their media mouthpieces, the message spun right from the beginning has been that business creates jobs. NOT!!!
Ironically, it’s those asked to bear the burden who actually create ALL those jobs that business needs in order to sustain itself and expand.
If the government really wanted to stimulate the economy …and create jobs…the solution would have been to give CONSUMERS the tax break, so they can go out and spend more, buy more, create demand …and create jobs as companies expand to meet that increased demand. That’s how the economy REALLY works. Not by cutting the amount in consumers’ pockets: to the contrary.
The truth is the HST is designed only to put more cash into the pockets of big business, corporate executives and shareholders. Many of us, of course, are shareholders through investments or RRSPs and we would benefit. But let’s admit it: the HST’s PRIME GOAL is not to create jobs; it’s to make investors even richer, even faster. And reward the top executives with even more huge perks and pay, for jobs well done.
As for the argument you are now hearing quite often “business needs this tax break to be competitive” … that’s one of the oldest cliches in the BC Liberal and federal Tory repetoires.
In fact, even under Clark’s plan to still stick the taxpapers with an extra $230 in taxes under the “new, improved HST” , they say corporate taxes will go up …. not back up to where they were five years ago, when their other breaks began … but up two per cent, and likely only TEMPORARILY. And what they do NOT say that on the very same day business will pay the higher corporate tax, the federal corporate tax will drop one-and-a-half percent: so their net increase is only half of a per cent.
Whoop-t-doo! While working families will continue to get hosed with an “average” $230 .. on top of every other fee increase and cost the government and its agencies have pi9led on is in the past 10 years.
Where is the fairness? How does it HELP the economy and CREATE JOBS by sucking more and more taxes from consumers …lowering, not increasing, their buying power.
Business has already enjoyed a number of tax cuts, grants, regulatory relief over the past few years (especially the film industry, by the way, one of the loudest corporate beggars that almost annually plays the “need a bigger break game” …pitting one province against the other, one state against the other, one country against the other… and then laughs all the way to the banks with profits in BILLIONS!).
It’s time for the consumers to get the tax break …so we have the money to actually buy the goods produced by business and maybe, occasionally, even attend a movie produced by the heavily subsidized film industry, where i have yet to see prices come down, thanks to their killing under HST savings, or any other freebies they’ve extorted out of government, here and around the world.