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Taxes for which state?

In: Tax Tyranny

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Abstract

Taxes exist to finance public expenditures. Therefore, in order to evaluate a tax system it may be useful to add an evaluation of public expenditures. There is a traditional distinction of state functions, namely the allocation, redistribution, and stabilization of resources. But these supposed roles of a state are debatable: There are no resources to allocate, redistribute, or stabilize since resources are created by individuals and belong legitimately to them, and states get resources by using coercion. There is, however, a justification of state interventionism, namely the existence of “public goods†, which are goods and services desired by all citizens and which would not exist without state activities (for instance national defense). But most state activities in reality do not correspond to this definition. Moreover, if it was true that states produce “public goods†they should not fear the competition of private producers; in fact they impose public monopolies by coercion, and if a good or a service is thus produced only by a state it is wrongly called a “public good†.

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  • ., 2020. "Taxes for which state?," Chapters, in: Tax Tyranny, chapter 11, pages 163-176, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:19263_11
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    Cited by:

    1. Simon Cousaert & Jiahua Xu & Toshiko Matsui, 2021. "SoK: Yield Aggregators in DeFi," Papers 2105.13891, arXiv.org, revised Mar 2022.
    2. Guillermo Angeris & Akshay Agrawal & Alex Evans & Tarun Chitra & Stephen Boyd, 2021. "Constant Function Market Makers: Multi-Asset Trades via Convex Optimization," Papers 2107.12484, arXiv.org.
    3. Jiahua Xu & Krzysztof Paruch & Simon Cousaert & Yebo Feng, 2021. "SoK: Decentralized Exchanges (DEX) with Automated Market Maker (AMM) Protocols," Papers 2103.12732, arXiv.org, revised Mar 2023.

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    Economics and Finance;

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