Cài đặt Steam
đăng nhập
|
ngôn ngữ
简体中文 (Hán giản thể)
繁體中文 (Hán phồn thể)
日本語 (Nhật)
한국어 (Hàn Quốc)
ไทย (Thái)
Български (Bungari)
Čeština (CH Séc)
Dansk (Đan Mạch)
Deutsch (Đức)
English (Anh)
Español - España (Tây Ban Nha - TBN)
Español - Latinoamérica (Tây Ban Nha cho Mỹ Latin)
Ελληνικά (Hy Lạp)
Français (Pháp)
Italiano (Ý)
Bahasa Indonesia (tiếng Indonesia)
Magyar (Hungary)
Nederlands (Hà Lan)
Norsk (Na Uy)
Polski (Ba Lan)
Português (Tiếng Bồ Đào Nha - BĐN)
Português - Brasil (Bồ Đào Nha - Brazil)
Română (Rumani)
Русский (Nga)
Suomi (Phần Lan)
Svenska (Thụy Điển)
Türkçe (Thổ Nhĩ Kỳ)
Українська (Ukraine)
Báo cáo lỗi dịch thuật
Also, the Flat Tax and Income Tax are overpowered when used together.
The income tax system should be re-done from the beginning. It could be done through three policies:
* Flat Income Tax: As it is now.
* Upper Tax Bracket: Higher income tax rate for the wealthy. Angers wealthy people and capitalists. Causes Brain Drain.
* Earned Income Tax Credit: As described above. Increases income for the poor, and somewhat for those with middle income.
In game, it is implied that the setting of the progressive income tax slider is what the richest 1% are being charged (ex: the default setting of USA's tax slider is at 34%, which was the highest bracket at the time the game was made). Therefore, it should earn less income than a flat tax of 34%, because a flat tax means EVERYONE is paying that amount, not just the top 1%.