You are comparing apples with pears.
What ever the tax is called, it is taxation. No 'apples and pears' about it.
It appears you may be suggesting the first argument is "specious" because it doesn't align with your beliefs, rather than engaging with the actual reasoning or evidence behind it.
The double taxation argument is specious. The state issued money is taxed over and over again until it is finally taxed away.
AI explains:
Start
🧾 Step 1: Income Tax and National Insurance (when earned)
Let’s say a person earns £100 in wages.
Assume they are a basic-rate taxpayer:
Income tax: 20%
Employee National Insurance (NI): 8% (approx., varies slightly)
Net income after tax and NI:
£100 – £20 (income tax) – £8 (NI) = £72
So £28 is taxed immediately when the person earns the money.
🛍 Step 2: Spending the Money (VAT)
Suppose they spend the £72 on goods and services subject to 20% VAT (standard rate in the UK).
£72 / 1.20 = £60 (pre-VAT price)
£12 is VAT
So now another £12 is taxed, and only £60 reaches the business providing the goods.
🏢 Step 3: Business Taxes
That £60 is now business revenue. Let's suppose the business:
Pays 25% Corporation Tax on profits
Spends 50% on costs (e.g., wages, materials)
So profit = £30
Tax = 25% of £30 = £7.50
Now, £7.50 is taxed again.
👷 Step 4: Repaid as Wages (Recycled Earnings)
Assume the business pays the remaining £30 as wages to staff. Again:
Income tax = 20% → £6
NI = 8% → £2.40
= Total tax: £8.40
The worker keeps: £21.60
🛒 Step 5: That worker spends the £21.60 (again taxed with VAT)
VAT = £3.60
Business gets: £18
📊 Total Tax Collected So Far:
StageAmount Taxed
Income tax + NI (Step 1)£28.00
VAT on initial spending£12.00
Corporation tax£7.50
Income tax + NI (Step 4)£8.40
VAT on next spending£3.60
Total£59.50
So of the original £100, ~£59.50 has been taken as tax by the time it has cycled through two earn-and-spend loops.
🔁 What if it continues cycling?
Each round of wages and spending is taxed again at each stage (income tax, NI, VAT, corp tax), although diminishing returns apply as less money remains.
Over infinite cycles, almost the entire original £100 would be taxed away—though in practice, savings, tax shelters, and consumption choices change this.
Finish
AI has no biases