And as we all know, people in business can't do math.Aby_Z said:Taxes. There's a little bit added to the cost of everything. Yeah, it'd probably make more sense if they just included tax into the full price you see, but then that'd require a little more math.
No. (sorry to be a dick, but I'm a math major, so I must!)Divine Miss Bee said:because the total sale is what is taxed a certain percentage, not each item. does that make sense?XJ-0461 said:EDIT: To clarify, what I'm basically asking is why can't American shops include VAT (or thier equivalent) in their prices?
It's not a Value-Added Tax, it's a tax on the total sale price of the item. For example, a $10 item would be $10 + $10 * .0855. A VAT is a tax on the seller's profit, not the total sale price.theriddlen said:7% VAT? Ehh, you are lucky, guys. In poland, VAT is always included in price, but we have 23%![]()
It's not added into the price, because the sales tax varies from state to state, and city to city. For example, where I live, it's 8.55%, but in other areas in California, it's 8.25%, yet in Nevada, there is no sales tax at all.Azure-Supernova said:Yeah, my when my missus came here from America, she asked why they didn't add on tax when we bought some stuff at GAME. I'm a tad confused as to why it's not just rolled into the price. If it's already been explained, I'm sorry, I just can't be bothered to look through three more pages to find out.
Exactly this. If you drive for forty minutes out of my town you will pay .25% less sales task. It's where most residents buy cars. I'd love it if individual businesses would take the .25 seconds required to print the price including tax on the tag as well.Buzz Killington said:I'm going to recycle a post I made on the subject a while back:XJ-0461 said:So I'm asking any Americans reading this, why do shops in your country do that? Is there some legal reason why it happens?
The way I always understood it was that it's a function of the way sales tax works in the US. Instead of a national VAT like the UK has, sales tax can be set all the way down to the city/town level. There are parts of the the US where you can drive for twenty minutes and be paying several fewer percentage points in sales tax.
Updating all the price labels in all the locations for a chain like, say, Best Buy would be prohibitively expensive, so they just put the retail price on everything and add tax at the register.
(I personally prefer the way the UK does it--it's a lot easier to shop when you're short on money and know exactly how much everything's going to cost.)
cause our government likes being sneaky.XJ-0461 said:EDIT: To clarify, what I'm basically asking is why can't American shops include VAT (or thier equivalent) in their prices?
The reason its never included in listed sales prices has to do with politics. Sales taxes are imposed in different areas like States, cities, counties, and municipalities. The sales tax rates in many places will shift depending on whether the governor, state senators, councilmen, or whatever legislative power in place, has a personal interest in raising or lowering a certain area's tax rateXJ-0461 said:EDIT: To clarify, what I'm basically asking is why can't American shops include VAT (or thier equivalent) in their prices?
The State decides to do that so tourists can help support their budget. That said there are several states that have either no sales tax or very limited sales tax.XJ-0461 said:So I'm asking any Americans reading this, why do shops in your country do that?