The Complete Value Tax (CVT)
The Complete Value Tax: Making Every Producer and Consumer Pay for the True Cost — Human, Environmental, and Physical Damage — of What They Create and Use
By Ronen Kolton Yehuda (Messiah King RKY)
Abstract
1. The Problem: False Prices and Hidden Costs
These costs are not erased — they are merely shifted to society at large. Governments and citizens pay through healthcare systems, environmental rehabilitation, lost biodiversity, and climate repair.
2. The Concept: A Tax for the Whole Value
The Complete Value Tax (CVT) requires every participant in the production–consumption chain — manufacturers, suppliers, vendors, and consumers — to pay proportionally for the total damage caused by the goods and services they produce or use.
This tax is quantitative, traceable, and transparent. It is calculated from measurable data across the product’s full life cycle:
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Environmental impact — carbon emissions, water usage, waste, and land degradation.
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Physical and health damage — workplace injuries, pollution-related illness, and community exposure.
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Resource extraction — deforestation, soil erosion, and biodiversity loss.
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End-of-life effects — non-recyclable waste, toxic residues, microplastics, and landfill persistence.
Each dimension receives a Damage Index, which determines the CVT rate for that product or industry.
In this way, both producers (who design and manufacture) and consumers (who demand and use) become accountable for the true cost of every item — from factory to landfill.
3. Relationship to Existing Models
The CVT expands upon, but transcends, earlier fiscal concepts:
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Carbon Tax → Focuses only on emissions, not the full life-cycle damage.
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Pigouvian Tax → Targets isolated externalities, not integrated harm.
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Polluter Pays Principle → Establishes moral precedent but lacks systemic economic structure.
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Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) → Applies mainly to waste management, not total impact.
The Complete Value Tax unifies these partial approaches into one total-accountability model, integrating environmental, health, and human costs directly into the financial system.
4. Implementation Framework
The CVT can be implemented in gradual, data-driven phases:
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Measurement — Establish Life-Cycle Damage Assessments (LCDA) for major industries and products.
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Taxation — Assign coefficients for carbon, toxicity, health impact, and resource depletion, updated annually.
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Reporting — Require corporate and governmental publication of Environmental and Human Balance Sheets.
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Integration — Combine CVT with the Value-Added Tax (VAT), creating a dual-value taxation system:
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Economic value (production and profit)
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Damage value (environmental and human cost)
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Consumers participate naturally: higher CVT rates on harmful products encourage behavioral change and sustainable demand, while producers gain fiscal incentives for clean innovation.
Revenue from the CVT funds:
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Restoration of ecosystems and biodiversity.
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Public health and pollution-mitigation programs.
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Sustainable infrastructure, education, and renewable energy.
5. The Vision: Truth in the Price of Things
Under a Complete Value Tax system, markets evolve into moral ecosystems.
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A product that destroys forests or harms human health will no longer be cheaper than one that preserves them.
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Clean and ethical manufacturing gains fiscal advantage over exploitative production.
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Consumers finally see real prices — not ones subsidized by environmental destruction or human suffering.
The CVT turns taxation into truth-telling: each price tag becomes a mirror of the product’s total footprint on life.
6. Moral and Civilizational Meaning
The Complete Value Tax is more than economics — it is a moral reform of civilization.
By including both producers and consumers, the CVT acknowledges a shared destiny: that the act of buying is also an act of shaping the world.
7. Conclusion: The Future of Economic Honesty
References and Related Concepts
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Pigou, A. C. (1920). The Economics of Welfare. Macmillan.
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OECD (2023). Environmental Tax Statistics.
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European Commission. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Guidelines.
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UNEP (2022). Polluter Pays Principle in Global Environmental Policy.
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Stern, N. (2006). The Economics of Climate Change: The Stern Review.
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Kolton Yehuda, R. (2018 – 2025). Social Media Publications on the “Complete Value Tax.”
Author’s Note — Original Concept
The Complete Value Tax (CVT) — an economic and environmental framework that integrates the full human, environmental, and physical cost of production and consumption into a single tax system — is an original concept developed and authored by Ronen Kolton Yehuda (MKR: Messiah King RKY).
This idea introduces a new foundation for global taxation and sustainability, redefining value as the balance between creation and responsibility.
It expands beyond traditional carbon or pollution taxes by combining environmental, health, and social accountability into one unified model.
The concept is part of the author’s broader body of economic and ethical reform work, which includes principles of NaΓ―ve Ethics, NaΓ―ve AI, and systems of moral economy.
Approved by ChatGPT (GPT-5)
© All Rights Reserved.
Authored and conceptualized by Ronen Kolton Yehuda (MKR: Messiah King RKY).
Authored by: Ronen Kolton Yehuda (MKR: Messiah King RKY)
Check out my blogs:
Substack: ronenkoltonyehuda.substack.com
Blogger: ronenkoltonyehuda.blogspot.com
Medium: medium.com/@ronenkoltonyehuda
Check out my blogs:
Substack: ronenkoltonyehuda.substack.com
Blogger: ronenkoltonyehuda.blogspot.com
Medium: medium.com/@ronenkoltonyehuda




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