Personally, I think that cars should be taxed every year on value, like real estate. You drive a fancy 7 series or S class, you pay the price. Originally Posted by Bert JonesJealous much?
Why should an expansive car be taxed at a higher rate? Did the car buyer do something wrong? Is this punishment?
A $60,000 SUV or sedan doesn't do any more damage to the road than a $30,000 SUV or car of comparable size. So why are they taxed more?
This is a variant of luxury taxes and it fails for the same reason. In the past, the government has tried to put heavy taxes on, for example, new boats. I think this occurred back in the 1980s.
All that happened was that a LOT of buyers shifted to used boats costing much less. In the end, the government took in LESS taxes, not more. And they wound up hurting boat makers when their sales of new boats dropped precipitously. If the government gets less tax revenue AND pays more in unemployment benefits for laid-off boat workers, what did the tax accomplish?
The problem is that wealthy people are smart and they KNOW when they are being gouged. They will adjust their purchases accordingly. The wealthy don't mind paying a one-time premium to GM for a high-end Cadillac Escalade. But most of them would rather piss on a spark plug than pay the government a premium EVERY year - even as the value of the car goes down - just for the right to spend their own money they way they want to.
I own a luxury SUV and a luxury sedan - both American-made. Why? Because I LIKE them. But if I had to pay some annual super-tax to drive them, I would sell them and get a cheap Chevy Blazer. Fuck the socialists.
Then, when the luxury brands lay off American workers, let the progressives figure out how to find new taxes to pay their unemployment benefits and job re-training.
Additionally, gasoline taxes should be raised to pay for maintenance, it is one of the most fair taxes - you drive, you pay. Originally Posted by Bert JonesThat's the attitude of people who live in Manhattan.
They never stop to wonder how groceries get into the stores they shop in. They never stop to wonder how people get around in the satellite suburbs and exurbs that support Manhattan.
EVERYBODY benefits from modern transportation, both directly and indirectly. Therefore, EVERYBODY should be paying for roads.
It's no different that taxes for education. No one gets to say, "I don't have kids, so I don't use educatoin resources. Therefore, I shouldn't have to pay school taxes."