Yes it is simplistic and then if it is effective?
This may be what we need right now, simplicity!!It's not passing the VAT from 5.5% to 0% (therefore a price drop of 5.2%) that will make people less poor... how much is the current inflation on food products?
Hold on thinking about it between 2021 and 2022:We have already had the equivalent of a 100% (and more) VAT increase on certain food products as a result! This is a good test:
a) Are these products no longer sold at all? NO but certainly less than before (Personally, I refuse to buy 75cl of olive oil for more than 10€... same with the stere of wood for more than 100€ or the bag of pellets for more than 8 €: I'd rather be leaner, I have room to spare, and be colder than fatten up assholes$...
)
b) This crazy extra money therefore falls into the pockets of big pigs there and does not go to the common good... (assuming that the VAT does not reimburse the burden of the debt, which is not earned)...
c) There was almost no compensation on people's incomes (except for a few pitiful energy checks...)
So a substantial increase in VAT is quite possible with compensation on other contributions!