George, Yoomurjak and the Tax - The Influence of Migration on Taxes
Gábor Tóth () and
Katalin Tóth ()
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Gábor Tóth: Óbuda University
Katalin Tóth: Eötvös Lóránd University
from Óbuda University, Keleti Faculty of Business and Management
Abstract:
“George couldn’t take his eyes off the little line. It was almost at the bottom of the screen – then seemed to pull up a tiny bit. It was still falling, but not quite so steeply. George stared – and it did it again. Someone behind him took a deep breath. George glanced at Eric – and saw that he was beaming in delight, his eyes flicking back and forth over the unceasing columns of numbers. ‘Not what we expected!’ Eric whispered to himself. ‘Not what we expected at all!’” It is known from George and the Big Bang by Lucy & Stephen Hawking that the simulation of the Big Bang by Cosmos, the supercomputer has verified all are theories about time and space as we know them. Pushing the moral panic button is a Hungarian specialty, according to Professor Endre Sík, since such an expensive and long-lasting manipulation affecting all can hardly be found anywhere else in the world. It happened in a period when the tendency to view migration and terrorism as key problems increased significantly in the whole of Europe. What is the use of the budget when pushing the moral panic button results in growing xenophobia? The face of the moral panic button is Yoomurjak, who is a free and wellknown brand (Eclipse of the Crescent Moon (Egri csillagok) is part of the national core curriculum), a Turk, a Muslim, an illegal trespasser, a kidnapper, a loser, disabled, scary and “cut by a Turkish child………” We start our analysis with the Muqaddimah, written by Ibn Khaldun, the 14th-century Muslim philosopher, and we arrive at researcher Stuart Rankin explaining the theory of the Big Bang. We have experimented with applying patterns described by the leading figure of Islamic economics in order to understand the effect migration and pushing the moral panic button have on taxes. During our work we may not get such a surprise as Professor Eric, when we find that rules we have known for centuries apply to the moral panic button as well.
Keywords: taxation; migration; yield; assessment; moral; army; jealousy; propaganda; authority (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pkk:meb017:442-452
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