I spent years on a project writing software on a product for completing, calculating and submitting UK tax returns. I never used the tag, nor wanted to.
From the Tour page "we're working together to build a library of detailed, high-quality answers to every question about programming."
If a question is primarily about what tax should be calculated - the specific, geographical legislative details - it is a domain question, not a programming question, so shouldn't be on here and the tag won't add value.
If a question is primarily about how to implement a specific calculation or a data-structure/algorithm, it is on-topic, but no longer about tax, it's about math(s) or programming and the tag won't add value.
As per rene's answer if it is about how to use specific products/tools' tax modules, it only adds value for context as a secondary meta tag.
If we're happy that tags can only add value as context but aren't appropriate as solo tags, then keep it. Else burn it.
As per Shog9's criteria on When to Burniate:
- Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied? and is it unambiguous?
It cannot describe the programming content of a question, because tax is an economic concept, not a programming concept. It is not unambiguous because it could not discern between e.g. UK VAT at point of sale or a calculation for completing a W2.
- Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
No.
- Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
It adds information, but not meaningful information. If someone had an issue calculating e.g. the UK Foreign Tax Credit Relief, the answer would be the same if the programming problem was for an identical calculation that was unrelated to tax.
- Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
No. Even in the same country, tax concepts are different when applied at point of sale, or for an individual's or organisation's annual return.
It is also, a meta tag.
The reason meta-tags are a problem is that they do not describe the content of the question. They describe some other aspect of the question
- If the tag can't work as the only tag on a question, it's probably a meta-tag
- If the tag commonly means different things to different people, it's probably a meta-tag.
As a tag, it only provides context, if you are having a programming-based question, it will have a programming-based answer, not a tax-based answer. If you don't have a programming question, it is off-topic.
It fails all 4 of the community accepted criteria, is a meta tag and should be burnt.
[hyperledger-fabric-sdk-js]
was likely not taught in a computing based course either, but I don't think that tag should be removed so that's a weird metric to use. Likewise[derivative]
isn't a programming concept but people may use programming to express something in another domain, a domain that may have experts on-site that can help with that expression.