Editing Green tax shift
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A '''green tax shift''' is a reduction in taxes on [[labour]] and an increase in taxes on [[waste]] and [[natural resources]]. It is | A '''green tax shift''' is a reduction in taxes on [[labour]] and an increase in taxes on [[waste]] and [[natural resources]]. It is believe to drastically improve [[employability]] and motivate [[product stewardship]], as companies that do not practice such stewardship end up paying more for [[waste disposal]]. | ||
It is one way in which [[comprehensive outcome]]s can be reflected in a [[price premium]]. [[Consumerium Services]] of course are another way this can happen. Combining the two would make [[price]] and [[Consumerium buying signal]] converge: the less desirable the product, the higher the taxes, thus the price. In a green tax shifted system the [[price premium]] | It is one way in which [[comprehensive outcome]]s can be reflected in a [[price premium]]. [[Consumerium Services]] of course are another way this can happen. Combining the two would make [[price]] and [[Consumerium buying signal]] converge: the less desirable the product, the higher the taxes, thus the price. In a green tax shifted system the [[price premium]] would have to be much lower to motivate buying the more ecologically desirable product. | ||
In the extreme | In the extreme it motivates the [[industrial ecology]] attitude where all output, even "waste", of one process, is treated as the resources of another: [[waste as resource]]. | ||
''See [[w:green tax shift]] for a more detailed description, though | ''See [[w:green tax shift]] for a more detailed description, though vandalized.'' |