richardhutnik said:
Supply and demand, and supply and demand ALONE determines what sets prices, nothing else. A business, if they can get away with charging more, will do this. Same thing goes with employees and so on. Doesn't matter if college education goes up, people can't get more money, if the market doesn't allow it. Doesn't matter either if your cost of gas goes up. Same thing with taxes. Unless it is applied to everyone evenly across the system, like you see in sales tax, it may ormay not show up in higher prices. And your comment about moving into a higher tax bracket means you get less money is BS. You get more money, just the rate you get it decreases. And in business, people will hustle, irregardless of what the rate is, because you always fight to maintain a profit, and you can never tell tomorrow what is going on. What happens, if you want to argue about increase in taxes causing a rise in prices, ONLY if the rise in taxes causes companies to go out of business, and there is less supply. At that point, prices will go up, as supply goes down. Otherwise, businesses have to find ways to increase profits, that doesn't affect their operations and ability to make money. |
You are kind of all over the board here making it hard to follow what you are trying to get at. So I'll just cover a couple of points.
1. Supply and demand are one of many factors that determine price. To be certain, it's a big one but by no means is it the sole qualifier for prices.
2. I too called it BS when I was younger and worked extra hard on some overtime only to see I was bumped into a higher tax bracket and my net was less than what I made the week before without overtime. My comment refered to those right on those bracket borders. Sure, if the raise is high enough to offset the increased taxes, then you'd make more.
The rEVOLution is not being televised







