Tag: Tax
Taxing the super rich a bit more is a progressive policy
"At our best when at our boldest": the words of one T Blair to Labour's party conference in 2002. He was right, of course, and should he be speaking with Gordon prior to the leader's speech on Tuesday, I hope he will take the opportunity to remind him of what he said and why he said it. Labour is – despite the cynics (many in our own party) who argue otherwise – a centre-left party, not a centre-right one. Labour's centre-left credentials since 1997 have been impressive: the introduction of the minimum wage, the abolition of the assisted places scheme, more help for pensioners, the hereditary principle in the Lords, huge investment in the NHS, debt cancellation etc, etc. The problem is that many of these radical and socially progressive initiatives were carried out during the first term. Since 2001 Labour has been, on the whole, competent but not radical, managerial but not inspirational.
As Labour gathers in Manchester it is clear to all that things have to change if Gordon Brown is to have any chance of turning Labour's (and his own) fortunes around. Yet strangely I am more optimistic about Labour's future today than I have been for some time. Why? Bizarrely, the tumultuous events on the world's financial markets in the past few days offer Labour a unique opportunity to stage a fight back and to put some clear red water between themselves and the City-friendly Tories. According to a Institute for Fiscal Studies the highest-earning 0.1% of the UK population enjoy an average annual income of £780,043. This is around 31 times higher than the national average income of £24,000. Given the present context, and given Gordon's commitment to fairness and equity, surely a national debate (led by the PM himself) about whether the very wealthy should contribute a bit more through the tax system would be most welcome. The public has watched on in horror and disgust at the City traders who deliberately bid down bank shares, bet on the failure of key stock and companies and even – it is suggested – spread false rumours in order to line their own already very deep and very full pockets. The debate should not be dominated by where the cut-off should be placed for any new tax (should it kick in at £150,000, £250,000 etc). Rather, it should be a debate about the principle of such a tax.
Talking about such issues could well be fertile ground for Labour and make life distinctly uncomfortable for David Cameron and his front bench. Cameron's Conservatives are made up of the "right kind of people", his people – privately educated and from backgrounds of immense wealth and privilege. Under Cameron, the Tories still believe that the role of government is to concentrate wealth and power in the hands of those who embrace their political, economic, and social views. For these reasons, Cameron would be reluctant to get into a debate about the super-rich and what they should or should not contribute via the tax system.
Brown should be bold. He has little to lose either personally or politically but both he and the nation have, potentially, a good deal to gain.
Obama v McCain : It's Class, Stupid!
McCain now , all of a sudden, seems to be stealing Obama’s change-agent, pro working and middle class, clothes.
The US Tax Policy Institute’s 14 August comparative analysis (reported by Money & Markets) of the two candidates’ proposed tax burden (below) shows that 7-property-owner McCain clearly knows which side of his bread to further butter!
Cherchez le windfall
Ivan Lewis: Tax the rich not the middle classes
Car Tax - the new 10p Tax own-goal?
My vision for the future
New Labour is dead in the water; its electoral credibility has been shattered and it's time we took a long hard look in the mirror, remember what we believe in, what we joined this great party for and look to the future. Gordon is the past, and he needs to go sooner rather than later if we are to remain a force in British politics. Here's my vision for the future, not for now, not necessarily for 2010 but for the long term health of the party.
£600 on Tax Allowance: 10p tax sorted
This is a brilliant and welcome resolution to the 10p tax fiasco and the government rightly deserves great praise for listening and for creating a wide-ranging solution. It makes people happy when they have more money in their pocket (without complicated bureaucracy) and we have a very effective message to give to voters on the door step when we are asked about what the party is doing for them.
Making work pay!
http://edmi.parliament.uk/EDMi/EDMDetails.aspx?EDMID=35657&SESSION=891
Why the 10% starting rate had to go
10p or not 10p: Ask Gordon on live webcast tonight
PROGRESS: Join the debate over John Hutton's Progress speech
Last week, John Hutton gave the opening speech in Progress' Progressive Challenge series, in which he argued that 'rather than questioning whether high salaries are morally justified, we should celebrate the fact that people can be enormously successful in this country.'
This week, we will be publishing a number of response articles, exclusive to Progress Online. Today's contributions come from Ruth Lister, Professor of Social Policy at Loughborough Univeristy, and the Labour blogger Luke Akehurst.
'Hutton’s ‘progressive individualism’ thus represents a dead end for those committed to the eradication of child poverty. It also offers a picture of a society that I, for one, do not want to live in. Successive British Social Attitudes Surveys, which reveal that the public appear to be more affronted by the levels of incomes at the top than the bottom, suggest that I am not alone.' - Ruth Lister >
'If anything, aspirational views are stronger amongst Labour's core working class supporters - who want a better material future for themselves and their children - than amongst more middle class voters who are already comfortably off and often want to pull up the drawbridge of opportunity behind them.' - Luke Akehurst >
Tomorrow: Derek Draper and Alex Kemp.
Well said Frank Field
What do you think? Personally I think it has real merit.
Ashcroft still not paying tax in the UK?
It seems despite promises by William Hague that the Conservative's biggest donor would move back to the UK and pay income tax here, Ashcroft is still avoiding tax whilst pumping money into marginal seats.
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/conservatives/story/0,,2208695,00.html
Andy Burnham: "Taxes should recognise marriage"

Can't say I'm a fan of Chief Secretary to the Treasury Andy Burnham anyway, but I think his comments here have plummeted him to a new low.
Brown to close private equity tax loophole

The government will close a tax loophole that allows fat-cat bosses to pay less tax than their office cleaners, Gordon Brown said today.
The prime minister vowed to take action on private equity chiefs in the pre-budget report later this year.
During a wide-ranging question-and-answer session with Mariella Frostrup, the TV and radio presenter, at the Labour party conference in Bournemouth, Mr Brown said: "Whenever there is a loophole that shouldn't exist we take action. Since 1997 we have closed a massive number.
"Sometimes it is very difficult to do so because you have lawyers and accountants who are always trying to find these loopholes.
"But on this issue of private equity I can assure you that we will do so."
Carbon tax, carbon benefit
The government should then distribute the total receipts per capita to everybody in the UK as a Universal Benefit.
How will Brown react?
| Next 20 >> |


