@ JanJal: Nearly 50 years ago I took my first course in Taxation. First class, the professor wrote his name on the board then turned and announced, “Taxation is logical.” Perhaps he should have said, “There is a logic to taxation.”
I repeat: “1) As I would tell my Accounting students: Accounting and taxes are not about numbers but are about words, concepts, regulations, rules, laws, conventions and language. Accounting is not about numbers.”
Taxation is an element of state coercion. While on the face of it the purpose of taxation is to raise money for the state to use, it is also a means of coercing behavior to achieve the ends the state desires. In order to tax effectively, the state needs systems to monitor people and enterprises and apply its power to effect collection. This is the foundation of state taxation and can be considered universal regardless of ideology, political system or social system. In this foundation we begin to understand the logic of taxation.
Included in taxation logic are the words of Benjamin Franklin, “In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.”
There was once a day when an English teacher came to China, worked and was unconcerned with taxes. Her agent for calculating, collecting, reporting and remitting taxes was her employer.
“Take random English teacher considering a few years stay in China. He's not going to understand pedantic law texts.”
Ignorance may be bliss but the state wants it tax money. As the sophistication of China’s monitoring and information collection of people, especially expats, improves, not understanding tax law is no excuse when caught.
“Only if you assume that the tax authorities always follow the laws.”
A Tax Bureau is, as its name implies, bureaucratic in nature and has the mission to collect taxes. If you understood how your taxes get from your pocket through the system to Beijing, you would realize a) how foolish, and b) how risky this assumption this statement is. Quite simply, the Tax Bureau gets the first slice of you tax pie and passes what is left up the government chain.
In practice, each tax remittance, calculated and documented by the employer, is recalculated by the tax bureau. Any under collection is collected from the employer. Any over collection is retained and the correct amount is forwarded up the chain. The major effort is borne by the employer.
Why would you even think Tax Bureaus would forgo collecting taxes? Especially taxes from rich foreigners?
First-hand account: Setting up a guesthouse in Xishuangbanna
Posted byThe hotel did not open. Although I do not know why, I do know the project was abandoned.
Getting Away: Vang Vieng
Posted byVang Vieng is a great place. I stay at the Elephant Crossing hotel. Quite nice but $45USD a night. A bit steep for the backpackers and consumers of 'magic" goods. So it is pretty quiet.
Rooms face the river and Karst formations. Clouds and wisps of clouds in and around the Karst mountains provide a constantly changing view.
Vang Vieng is my favorite sit-and-do-nothing place on Laos.
Snapshot: Kunming Carnival's Grand Parade
Posted byGBTEXDOC, blobbles, Heinz
I agree with you guys. GK, please get ahead of events. We might like to go too!
Kunming's etymological vapor trail
Posted bybluppfisk is right. Calibre is really good and easy to use. I have found making your own original ebooks for the kindle fairly easy. I do it this way: Word -> RTF -> MOBI. PDF docs can be converted as well but it depends on how the PDF doc was created. Color photos can look sad on the kindle so they are best converted to BW first.
Kunming's etymological vapor trail
Posted byWalter, got mine from Kindle. Project Gutenberg has a version with illustrations.
Actually, Project Gutenberg has more than 200 FREE downloads on China. Many of these are in Chinese, 汉字。
Any .mobi ebook will work on a Kindle or Kindle for PC or Mac.