Well, since someone's preaching action instead of chit-chat:
Amount of taxes to be paid = TLC*CDF(Gross Income)*Gross Income - YSI
CDF is the cumulative distribution function of income, updated annually, that maps gross income to a percentile in the Kolmogorov sense.
TLC is the Tax Leniency Coefficient and is an arbitrary real number between 0 and 1. Does what it says on the tin. People "vote" on the specific value.
YSI is the Yearly Survival Index and is the minimum amount of money required for a citizen to survive that year. Updated annually.
Negative taxes is money going the opposite direction.
Thoughts?
I'd have to ask you to clarify what you mean by 'Kolmgorov', first. I'm not familiar with that term in the sense of CDFs, and wikipedia isn't helping me out. You're also ignoring the fact that the government needs to take in money. That method would mean that the government would lose all their tax income, and would have nothing left over the pay for necessary services.
There is a very large issue here that people seem to be ignoring. Lots of references are made to the 'average income' and stuff like that, but that's actually a very complicated and hard to define concept, even if you only refer to the arithmetic mean.
How does one calculate the average? Such a method only works if you take your averages over a population where most of the people are in a small difference from the norm. That is actually very hard to do.
In London, the cost of renting an average flat in London is around £1200 per person per month. Most other cities have prices for the equivalent about a third of that, and some cities have prices of less than a fifth that. If you take the average over the whole country, then you could easily see someone be unable to pay for a roof over their head, but still have the government demanding money from them.
Now suppose you want to avoid that, so you divide up the country into smaller sub-areas and take averages over each area. You still have the problem that some people have greater costs. Someone with lots of children and elderly relatives to take care of might find it impossible to meet basic needs while the government demands money from them, while someone else who is single and without others relying on them might have plenty of money and still be getting more from the government.
There's no clear idea of 'average' that can be applied on a large scale, so if you keep saying that people's richness depends on the average, you're going to run into some very large problems when applying any policy based on the average over a large scale. Even over a small scale, it can very enormously.
Allow me to add.....The rich people keep the poor ones down.Its Capitalism 101.If you can't go higher make sure everyone goes lower.
Some rich people keep some poor people down, and some do not. Similarly, some people get rich by a method which benefits others.
Why rich people suck.
So you're saying that the punishment for stealing should be based on the amount stolen?