It is normal for politicians, when living standards are falling,We have a wide selection of drycabinets
to choose from for your storage needs. to channel the public’s
discontent towards those who can be called rich. When the cause of that
discontent is that the politicians have been unable to run a sound
budget and thus need to cut expenditure, this has the added benefit of
deflecting the public’s rage away from Westminster. It is not really
about raising money to reduce the national debt. It is about making the
public think less ill of the government, or, if a pledge made in
opposition, of the would-be government.
Last week’s call by the
Labour leader Ed Miliband for a so-called mansion tax was redolent of
Denis Healey’s promise,Don't make another silicone mold without these
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supplies and accessories! back in 1974, to squeeze the rich “until the
pips squeak”. The then Labour shadow Chancellor had also drawn up plans
for a wealth tax, over and above existing income and capital gains
taxes. Fifteen years later in his memoirs, Healey admitted that: “We had
committed ourselves to a Wealth Tax: but in five years I found it
impossible to draft one which would yield enough revenue to be worth the
administrative cost.” He concluded: “You should never commit yourself
in Opposition to new taxes unless you have a very good idea about how
they will operate in practice.” In particular, Healey had discovered
that the flight of capital would actually have resulted in a loss of
revenue to the Exchequer.Online shopping for Cable Ties from a great selection of Lamps.
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somehow doubt that Miliband bothered to consult the 95 year old Labour
ex-Chancellor before coming up with his own version of squeezing the
rich. It was not so much a suggestion of what he would do in government
as a cunning plan to exploit the divisions within the Coalition: the
Liberal Democrats have long advocated what they call a “mansion tax”,
but have been thwarted by David Cameron.
Just how much Clegg and Co have been thinking of this was revealed at the weekend,Willkommen im virtuellen Zuhause der Lercher Werkzeugbau
GmbH. with leaked reports of an internal policy document drawn up by
two of the party’s MPs, suggesting that a wealth tax should include all
assets: jewellery, for example. In furtherance of this, it said: “HM
Revenue and Customs, in policing the system, will have to visit homes to
test whether asset values of jewellery, paintings etc., were correct.”
The thought of widows being shaken down by Tax Inspectors on a jewellery
hunt (“Show us yer old wedding ring, now”) was one of the things that
caused Healey to back down. Not nearly as quickly, though, as Vince
Cable, who, within hours of this policy document emerging, declared that
the idea of jewellery and paintings being included was “wacky”.
Why
is that “wacky”, but a mansion tax not so? After all, the homes that
people live in are arguably more essential for their families than any
item of jewellery or painting. This only demonstrates that politicians
advocating a wealth tax are not really interested in the principle, but
only in the noise such a policy makes – and if it seems discordant, they
will drop it.
There are, in fact, some good principled – rather
than political – objections to what the Liberal Democrats and Labour
propose (an annual tax on properties worth more than £2m). When someone
buys a property, it is out of income that has already been taxed. He
will pay stamp duty on that transaction – up to 7 per cent for the most
valuable houses. If he then takes on builders to improve it, he will pay
an additional 20 per cent of that cost in VAT. And if he sells the
property, and it is not his primary residence, he will have to pay
capital gains tax of 28 per cent. Finally, there is inheritance tax at
40 per cent on estates above a threshold of £325,000 – although great
Labour dynasties such as the Benns and the Milibands have used Deeds of
Variation to pass property down through the family in a way that avoids
the full impact of inheritance tax.Wide range of unique crystal mosaic and natural stone mosaic tiles.
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point of principle here is that tax is generally paid on property when
income from it is available – for example, on rent accruing; and the
reason why stamp duty works is that in the great majority of cases a
person has cash available from the sale of an existing property, when
buying a new one. Therefore, if there were to be an additional property
tax, it would be much fairer to decide that capital gains tax should
also be charged on the primary residence, when it is sold, rather than
levy a tax simply on the fact that someone – whether or not a little old
lady – happens to be living in a home above a certain value. Such a
change, however, would affect all home owners making a profit on sale
and would, therefore, not meet the politicians’ objective of seeming to
be nasty only to rich bankers.
And, while we’re discussing
equity in taxation, it should be noted that, according to the Institute
for Fiscal Studies, it is not until a standard family with two earners
and two children is earning just over £25,000 that it begins to become a
net payer of any income tax at all. Meanwhile, the HMRC’s own official
figures show that the top 1 per cent of income earners paid 24.8 per
cent of all income tax collected in 2011-2012: the same people’s
earnings represented 11.2 per cent of the total. In other words, the tax
system in this country is already highly progressive.
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