Canadians are often branded as whiners, but Americans take the cake when it comes to complaining about taxes. And seriously, I’m tired of hearing it.
This country is a bounty of cheap, low-taxed junk. It’s also full of creditors who are all too willing to finance that junk for low monthly installments (and no payments until June of 2086). In fact, it’s entirely possible to live like royalty in America, finance this lifestyle over the next four-hundred years, and pay a pittance of taxes for all of it.
Please understand that I have tremendous respect for the mantra “no taxation without representation”, and I agree that taxes need to be managed carefully and spent appropriately (something the United States and Canada are not particularly good at) … but I also think that people whine about it way too much in this country.
Take, for instance, a car purchase. Let’s suppose this new car costs $20,000. For the privilege of that purchase I’ll donate an additional $600 (which technically isn’t even sales tax - it’s a “highway use tax”) to the coffers of North Carolina. That same purchase in Ontario would have resulted in a $2600 windfall for the government. And we can make this comparison relatively easily, since the US dollar and the Canadian dollar are virtually at par right now. In the UK, the same vehicle (based on the VAT percentage rate) would net Her Majesty about $4200 - give or take a bit, since nobody really understands how taxation works in the EEC (and there’s a good chance that they don’t, either).
We also enjoy a deluge of tax deductions. The interest from my mortgage, for instance, is a healthy tax deduction that puts a good bit of money back in my pockets at the end of the year. No such luck in Canada.
But going back to cars (which is much more interesting than houses). Now that we’ve bought that $20,000 car and made some government richer, we need to fill the tank.
In the United States, 15 gallons of regular fuel will run me about $47, based on the prices I saw this morning.
That same tank in Canada will cost me $59.53 (converting back to USD, based on today’s exchange rate).
That same tank in London, England will cost an agonizing $120. And in the Netherlands? You’re better off just walking.
In fact, the United States has some of the cheapest gas in the world, outside of the oil-producing countries like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait.
I could go on and on, but I won’t, because I don’t want to give the impression that Canadian are whiners. ![]()
3 comments
Posted in Blog
Written on Thu, 28 February 2008 at 10:55 am
Tags: Canada, money, North Carolina, taxes
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February 29th, 2008 at 2:07 am
Wow! Home mortgage interest is deductible? It IS the promised land! In Australia, your car example would net the gov $2000 and the tank of fuel would cost $75. (US$) I almost choked on my cereal the other day when I read that a hike in fuel prices was causing pain for the American consumer. I woulda been a goner if I’d known their mortgage interest was paid for by the gov!
March 1st, 2008 at 2:39 am
Americans have that individualistic, frontier, “can-do” spirit…don’t need no stinkin’ taxes so the government can spend our money…whereas Canada and most other Western democracies opt for a more utilitarian approach…very few can get super rich but the super poor and above get the basics. I over-simplify, certainly. And then the same Americans that hate relying on government have no problem relying on banks…and subsequently the governments of China and the Middle East to finance the cars and homes they can’t really afford.
I rarely hear a story of an American’s fuel pains and sympathize…perhaps those who depend on transporting goods…not those who work in RTP but wanted a yard for their kids so they got a house in Holly Springs and now it costs $200 a week to fill up the Tahoe…
March 5th, 2008 at 9:30 am
I try not to complain about gas. I only have a 10 gallon tank so it costs me about $30 or a little more to fill up. Is it worth $30 to me to be able to drive around for 2-3 weeks? Yes it is.