Research Areas
Value-Added Tax (VAT)
A VAT is similar to a sales tax, except that it is paid at all levels of production, on only the value added at each level, to prevent pyramiding and eliminating the need to separate business inputs from retail sales.
For example, take a wooden table sold at retail and a 10 percent VAT rate. The lumber company sells the wood to the furniture maker for $50, paying $5 (10% of $50) to the government. The furniture maker sells the table to the retailer for $120, sending $7 ($120 - $50 = $70 X 10% = $7) to the government. The retailer sells the finished table to a customer for $150, sending $3 to the government ($150 - $120 = $30 X 10% = $3). The total tax paid is $15, or 10% of the final retail price.
Advocates of VATs say this structure reduces evasion because it's harder for three entities to avoid paying a $15 tax than it is for one. This in turn allows VAT rates to be much higher than ordinary sales taxes (which suffer evasion as they move into double digits), and they can generate huge sums of money.
Additional questions about the VAT? Contact us at (202) 464-6200.
Articles from the Tax Foundation
- The Proper Role of Taxes in Deficit and Debt Reduction, by David S. Logan, July 29, 2011
- Nick Kasprak of the Tax Foundation on New Online Tools, February 10, 2011
- New Online Tools for Taxpayers , February 7, 2011
- Draft from President's Deficit Commission Stirs the Fiscal Pot in Washington, November 10, 2010
- New Online Calculator Helps Americans Evaluate Value Added Taxes, October 28, 2010
- Dr. Randall Holcombe of the Mercatus Center: VAT Too Costly for U.S., July 14, 2010
- Who Benefited Most from the Bush Tax Cuts?, May 26, 2010
- Top 10 Tax Stories of the Decade, by TF Staff, December 30, 2009
- Jim Pethokoukis of Reuters: Health Care Reform, the Deficit and Economic Recovery, November 4, 2009
- Finding Stable Ground: California Reform Commission Puts Tax Overhaul on Table, by Kiran Sheffrin and Micah Cohen, July 27, 2009
- Comparing International Corporate Tax Rates: U.S. Corporate Tax Rate Increasingly Out of Line by Various Measures, by Robert Carroll, August 28, 2008
- William Fox on the Merits of State Sales Taxes and Local Property Taxes, April 5, 2007
- Michigan "Index Analysis": Elimination of Michigan SBT, by Chris Atkins and Curtis S. Dubay, May 23, 2005
- Overview of the Foreign Sales Corporation/Extraterritorial Income (FSC/ETI) Exclusion, by TF Staff, January 2, 2002
- Border Tax Adjustments and Fundamental Tax Reform, by William P. Orzechowski, November 1, 2001
- VAT After All?, August 5, 1985
- A Value-Added Tax for the United States?, by TF Staff, June 1, 1979
- Project Note No. 28 Major State Taxes 1939 and 1950, December 31, 1951