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Taxes are defined as mandatory
payments of the contributors to the budget and to the extra-budgetary funds in
the amount determined by law and within the stipulated deadlines.
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The functions of taxes are a
manifestation of their essence; they are a means to represent the
characteristics of taxes.
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The functions of taxation
illustrate its social purpose of the value-based distribution and
redistribution of income. Each of the functions fulfilled by the taxation
instrument is a manifestation of an internal feature, an indicator or trait or
this economic category.
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The important function
of taxation in India is to generate funds for government expenditure. Hence,
option b is correct.
There are five main functions of taxation:
fiscal, redistributory, regulating, controlling, and promoting.
1.
The main function of taxation is the
fiscal one. It is through fiscality that taxes play their role in the
formation of the state budget necessary for the realization of national and
holistic state programmes. The fiscal function provides for the achievement of
the main social goal of taxation тАУ the formation of the stateтАЩs financial
resources necessary for executing the role of the latter (defense, social,
environmental protection, etc.)
2.
The allocation function of
taxation expresses their essence as a special centralized instrument of
allocation relations and consists of the social income redistribution among
various groups of citizens: from wealthy to deprived ones, which ultimately
provides for the assurance of the social stability of the population.
3.
The regulatory function of
taxation was initiated as soon as the state started to take active part in the
economic set-up of the society. This function is aimed at achieving specific
goals of the taxation policy through the taxation mechanism.
4.
The controlling function of
taxation тАУ through taxation, the state controls the financial-economic activity
of juridical and natural persons. This also contributes to controlling the
sources of income and the directions of spending.
5.
The incentive function
stipulates special taxation arrangements for a certain group of citizens, who
are social achievers (participants in wars, etc.). This function of taxation has
a social facet.
Taxation regulation entails three
sub-functions:
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The stimulating sub-function
is aimed at the development of special socio-economic processes, and is
implemented through a system of allowances, exemptions and preference
arrangements. The legislation in force stipulates the stimulation of a number
of taxpayer categories such as the owners of small enterprises, the
agricultural producers, capital investors, or charities.
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The destimulating
sub-function inhibits some socio-economic processes through the conscious
exaggeration of the taxation burden. As a rule, the effect of this sub-function
is related to the introduction of excessive tax rates. These are, for example,
the protectionist measures of the state, aimed at supporting local producers
through prohibitive import custom duties. It is important to keep in mind,
nevertheless, that taxation relations, as any other relations, must replicate
continuously. Taxes must be collected today, tomorrow and always. This is why
the utilization of the destimulating sub-function should not lead to the
weakening of the taxation basis, to suppression, or even to liquidation of the
tax source. Such an exaggeration may result in a situation where there will be
no income/processes to be taxed.
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The replication (regeneration)
function is explained as follows: by taxing the utilization of natural
resources, roads, mineral and primary resources, the state uses these proceeds
in order to regenerate the exploited resources.