Value Added Tax?
What kind of value are they planning to add so as to tax something for that added value?
Somebody mines some silver and sells it to a processor. VAT tax for the mining.
The processor purifies the silver and makes it into a usable, industrial form, sells it to an electronics manufacturer. Now you have to calculate how much more the silver is worth per unit now that it is purified and tax it. VAT tax on the processing.
Somebody takes the silver and puts it onto a computer chip, sells the computer chip to a computer manufacturing company. Now you have to figure out how much more the silver is worth and all the other components on the chip relative to what they were before they were on the chip. VAT tax on the computer chip.
The computer seller sells the the chip in a computer.. Now they have to figure out how much more the silver is worth in the computer chip now that it is in a computer, and I think there might be a VAT tax on that to the consumer, plus sales tax..
Maybe somebody can correct this, cause I'm not 100% sure if I have this example down square yet... what I said I believe is theoretical, whereas in reality the computer chip maker would calculate what their materials were, how much they are selling the materials for, less their costs for labor, and then they tax the remaining.. I believe that is how it works from an accounting standpoint..
Either way, this is an attack on the electronics industry and any other industry that requires a lot of processing.