How to set coupons?

For example, if you spend 1000 yuan in a certain consumption activity, you can use a coupon 300 yuan, then the coupon holder will give the coupon to the operator and pay it to the operator 700 yuan by electronic payment tools, and the operator will return the cash from 900 yuan or 950 yuan to the consumer, for example. The total amount invested by the operator and paid by the coupon holder is 1 1,000 yuan, and you can earn 1 1,000 yuan or 50 yuan. When the coupon is redeemed in 300 yuan, the coupon holder can get 200 yuan or 250 yuan, which is the redemption of the coupon. Expand data 1. Is it illegal to cash out coupons? First of all, in the distribution and collection of coupons. If the government stipulates that only people who meet certain conditions can receive coupons, such as the needy people who require subsistence allowances, and a person who does not meet the conditions obtains coupons by forging, defrauding relevant certification materials or making false statements, it obviously constitutes fraud. If the government does not restrict the conditions of recipients, but requires recipients to promise that they must use vouchers for specific consumption (such as buying food and other necessities) or at least promise that they must use vouchers for consumption (that is, they cannot cash out directly from operators or buy vouchers and sell them to "black intermediaries" who collude with operators to cash out), recipients falsely promise to prepare specific consumption (fabricate facts) or conceal the real purpose of cashing out (hide the truth), and then collect them. In the above two cases, the amount of fraud should be based on the amount of the coupon, not the actual cash obtained after cashing out. If the government doesn't set any conditions for issuing coupons, and the recipients don't need to make a commitment, but the people make an appointment in some way, and then the recipients are produced in a way similar to lottery (for example, a certain number of people are randomly selected from the reserved crowd by the computer system), then if someone is selected after making an appointment and immediately receives coupons, it is obviously impossible to constitute fraud in this link. Secondly, in the process of cashing out. Since both parties are well aware of the facts of cashing out and both parties have their own interests, it is obvious that this link cannot constitute any crime of theft, fraud and other crimes against property. Finally, the operator cashes the coupon. When the government requires operators to pay vouchers, they must provide proof of the actual consumption of the original voucher holders, such as shopping invoices. The operator provides false proof of payment voucher, which obviously constitutes fraud. However, if the holder of the original voucher knows that the operator must provide the proof of consumption to cash the voucher, and assists the operator to forge the proof of consumption for the purpose of cashing out, it certainly constitutes fraud.