Most health related supplies are not taxed but sanitary products are which is pretty controversial (especially as condoms are not).Thanks for that. So services and health supplies aren't taxed there either. Nor is food from the grocery store. Restaurant food is taxed here. So is booze at the grocery store. Interesting you don't pay tax on books and magazines. We do. Our federal gubment doesn't participate in public education, that's a state domain. So we pay for most of that with property taxes which are levied by our counties.
I think when it was just a tax on luxury items it was called Purchase Tax.View attachment 25006
Funny you should post about this this afternoon, I was looking at my groceries list earlier and was looking at the VAT chargeable items. VAT stands for Value Added Tax, initially it was supposed to be on luxury items but there is no rhyme or reason to it these days. Here is my grocery list, the items marked with an * have VAT charged, so paracetamol (?acetamphetamine in USA) toothpaste and bin bags are chargeable, hardly luxuries! Feminine hygiene products have recently been reduced to 5% after a campaign, again hardly luxuries. Chocolate is chargeable yet biscuits aren’t!
Yeah, yesterday I got some petrol (from Asda which tends to be the cheapest place for miles) it was £1.20.7 per litre (thats about $1.69 according to Google) so that's $6.40 per US gallon or $7.68 per UK gallon!They tax gasoline too but not as much as they do there. Our gas is only $2.25/gallon here.
I don't think that is correct because at each stage of the process the VAT on the previous stage can be claimed back so only the end user is effectively paying the tax.The price we pay for any item includes the sum of all the 'value added tax' along each stage of the supply chain. A can of beans has VAT imposed on the steel can, the farmer who grew the beans, the transport company who delivered the beans to the processor, the processor and the company that delivered the tins to the supermarket. All these taxes on values added, add to the final price and to the amount of VAT we pay on that tin.
unless the person selling is not vat registerI don't think that is correct because at each stage of the process the VAT on the previous stage can be claimed back so only the end user is effectively paying the tax.
Actually biscuits are chargeable, but cakes not.Chocolate is chargeable yet biscuits aren’t!
Oh I’ve heard about the Jaffa cakes story. However my Bahlsen Pick Up biscuits don’t have an * next to them on my Tesco grocery list pictured above, implying they are VAT free!Actually biscuits are chargeable, but cakes not.
There was a very long court case about whether Jaffa Cakes were cakes or biscuits -McVities won this aginst Inland Revenue.
I stand corrected. Thanks!I don't think that is correct because at each stage of the process the VAT on the previous stage can be claimed back so only the end user is effectively paying the tax.
Inheritance Tax even manages to combine the two."in this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes."
Sorry you're right - it's chocolate covered biscuits that invoke VAT.Oh I’ve heard about the Jaffa cakes story. However my Bahlsen Pick Up biscuits don’t have an * next to them on my Tesco grocery list pictured above, implying they are VAT free!
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