WHY
WE ARE TAXED
Outline:
1. The
duties of the government of a country.
2. Much
money is needed by the government to carry on its work.
3. As
the work is for the benefit of public, the public must find money.
4. So
taxation necessary and justified.
Every country must have a
government of some sort, or life would be impossible. The primary duties of a
government are to protect the life property of the citizens, to maintain law
and order, to settle disputes between
citizens in a just and orderly way through the law courts, to make and
maintain the roads and highways, and to defend the country from foreign foes.
Besides all this, many governments maintain and direct education, provide
hospitals for the sick, and attend to sanitation.
Now all these great public duties
need money. An army and navy have to be kept up; the police force and the
judges have to be paid; schools have to be provided and teachers supported;
expert health officers and sanitary engineers employed. The big government
departments, that have to oversee the work of the army of officials employed,
cost a lot to maintain. Besides all this, grants are expected from the
government for big and necessary public improvements, such as the better
housing of the poor, open spaces in towns for recreation, large public
buildings, railways, bridges, and so on. Whether these expenses are borne by
the central government or local bodies, like town councils, money is needed for
them all.
Where is all the money needed for
these public services to come from? That question is answered by another,
namely “For whose benefit are all these services maintained?” The answer is for
the public. It is the people as a whole, rich and poor, that benefit by
security of life and property, by sound administration of justice, by the
maintenance of roads and bridges, by the public hospitals, public schools, and
good sanitation. Therefore it is only
right and fair that the public, the individual citizens, should contribute the
money needed; for the money they give in rates and taxes comes back to them in
the shape of these benefits which all enjoy.
This should be a sufficient answer
to those who grumble at having to pay taxes to government. Of course nobody
likes paying taxes. Even those who know that taxation is necessary and just, do
not exactly welcome the tax-collector as a bosom friend. But, so long as we
have a good and efficient government, so long as our money is being used in the
right way and so long as the burden of taxation is distributed fairly, as
different classes can bear it, we have no right to grumble at having to pay our
share of the taxes.
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