Although this is a blog about taxes, let’s start with what are not taxes. Along with these
well-known and massively studied tributes, we can also find a distant,
often-forgotten relative: personal contributions.
Whereas the global tendency since the WWII has been a steady
rise in economic contributions, personal contributions have shrunk, and they
are considered as a remain from the past.
There are jury duty, poll duty, work done by inmates, ecc. But
there is one that stands out among the others, because of its special
characteristics: military service. To my mind, it can provide useful things to a
society; however, the fact of giving away some months of your life to your country is too burdensome.
The 1978 Spanish Constitution mentions personal
contributions, and its article 31 reads:
(…) 3. Personal or property contributions
for public purposes may only be imposed in accordance with the law.
This shows that both types of contributions are equally
treated in terms of legal reservations.
I can think of some reasons that have led us to the current
situation:
In the last 60 years, the loss of power by sovereign States has been
more acute, due to the rise of international organizations such as the EU, the
UN or the NATO. This has created a double effect: the sense of a more united
world, where a large national Army is no longer necessary, and also, the forementioned
loss of power prevents Governments from using them, since they would be highly
unpopular and considered as a authoritarian mesure.
Linked to the last
idea, individual rights have become stronger, and the idea of “doing something
because your country tells you to do it” seems outdated. What JFK said about
“what you can do for your country” only makes sense if something extraordinary
would happen, such a war or a catastrophe, when the idea of “nation” and “duty”
becomes stronger. Until then, the average
citizen prefers to periodically pay a substantial sum to the Tax Agency and
forget about the rest.
Let’s see an example: in France workers have to work for
free on a bank holiday, usually on the day of Pentecost, in order to finance
social benefits to the elderly and the disabled. It is called “la journée de
solidarité”. No wonder this measure was taken after the death of
hundreds of elderly citizen during a heat wave in 2003.
Fun fact: during WWI, the U.S. War
Industries Board asked women to stop
buying corsets and hand the authorities their old ones (corsets with metalic
pieces were the custom) to free up metal for war production. It is
estimated that they freed up about 28,000 tons of
steel, enough to build two battleships. So
next time you think the Tax Agency is so greedy that they would even take your
underwear, be aware that the Government has already done it before.
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