I don't know why you say that.
Their target is the Japanese residents of the Rich Metropolises.
In reality, the residents of the Rich Metropolises are simply transferring the Residents' Tax they (would have to) pay from the Rich Municipality that is awash with tax revenue and really doesn't need the money, to the Remote Impoverished Municipality of their choice to support their rural economy, for which the remote municipality provides a token of their appreciation that they can buy Wholesale from their local producers and provide to you as a gift for your donation. By cutting out the middle men, and not having to pay transportation and distribution costs, retail rents and labour costs in your Expensive Municipality, it seems like you are getting a bargain.
You could travel to those remote locations and buy directly from the producers or the local Michi No Eki...
but then you have to devote your time and pay for the transportation, or you could order them remotely and takyuubin...
If they sold the goods to a big Wholesale Distributor, the margin to the local producer would be far less, so they end up making more money.
The remote local government probably still makes a tidy markup, and the rural economy benefits greatly...
You will probably not choose to do it / choose not to do it if you could buy those goods locally at similar prices if you lived in that municipality, and if you weren't making significant income that would result in a perceived benefit to you...
The rest is simply accounting for the tax adjustments that produce the result of reducing your Taxable Income to account for your having already sent the Tax Payment to the Remote Municipality equivalent to Paying Tax in advance - like Yotei Nouzei, and a deduction for your Tax Donation to the Remote Municipality, so that your payment comes out of Pre-Tax Income instead of Post-Tax Income... (This is already written into the Tax Code for government, political, charitable, or certain other donations).
When you pay your Residents' Taxes, they are deducted from Pre-Tax Income, but your Furusato Nouzei was paid out of Post-Tax Income, so already subjected to your Marginal Rate of National Income Tax, for which you are entitled to a Tax Refund... Hence the deduction... You are simply getting the National Tax back that you paid on your Residents' Taxes...
At the end of the day, the Japanese government is actually making a profit by having you send your Residents' taxes, instead of having to pay additional subsidies to those remote Municipalities from the National Tax Coffers.
And your perceived benefit is the perceived discount on the products you received...
Only if you live in one of the Impoverished Municipalities with declining population and tax revenues...northSaver wrote: ↑Thu Mar 14, 2024 5:17 am My wife and I are of the same opinion. It's a terrible system and we never do it. We want to support our own town, the place we live and work, not some other town based on a cheap gift!
Between Impoverished Municipalities, if someone from that municipality purchases something from your municipality, and you purchase something from their municipality, it nets out to zero...
But, the municipality gets a huge influx of funds from the residents of the Rich Metropolises that are awash with tax revenue and can afford to forego the small amount of revenue the Japanese who have migrated to the Rich Metropolises choose to send back to support their Furusato... (Foreigners are just lucky to also be able to benefit from the effect - hopefully the well-healed ones who can afford to send huge amounts of tax to the provinces...).