The BBC corrects the Labour party's incorrect statements on tax
The BBC factcheck site did a very good article during the election which proved that Labour was talking nonsense about who pays the most tax.
"The claim: Low and middle earners are bearing the burden of the tax take.
Reality Check verdict: The government is very reliant on richer people for its funding. More than a quarter of income tax is paid by the 1% of taxpayers with the highest incomes."
"The burden in terms of the tax take is falling on middle and low earners," Labour shadow Chancellor John McDonnell told BBC Radio 4's Today programme during the election.
"In fact, the tax base is very reliant on rich people, with income tax becoming increasingly reliant on them. The Resolution Foundation, which does a great deal of work on inequality, says that the income tax system is relying too much on the richest 10%, which is a problem because their earnings are volatile."
Read more here.
The article is worth revisiting.
"The claim: Low and middle earners are bearing the burden of the tax take.
Reality Check verdict: The government is very reliant on richer people for its funding. More than a quarter of income tax is paid by the 1% of taxpayers with the highest incomes."
"The burden in terms of the tax take is falling on middle and low earners," Labour shadow Chancellor John McDonnell told BBC Radio 4's Today programme during the election.
"In fact, the tax base is very reliant on rich people, with income tax becoming increasingly reliant on them. The Resolution Foundation, which does a great deal of work on inequality, says that the income tax system is relying too much on the richest 10%, which is a problem because their earnings are volatile."
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Comments
Why then am I all for people having funds in tax havens, well its because they dont have to pay this money and instead can use it to invest in things.
I am completely against governments demanding all this from people, who have no say in what it is spent on. If i had my way there would be a referendum each year on the governments spending, and if that is not acceptable, then they should revisit and announce a new one. its not hard.
I don't actually have a problem with that, but if you try to increase it further the results will tend to be counterproductive.
I tend to agree with your previous suggestion, Jim, that Britain's economy would work better with fewer exemptions and lower tax rates, which would probably bring in more money from the rich, not less and certainly make things more simple.
Also i think a lot of people would be more inclined to pay taxes if it was more clear on what each tax is being used to fund. At the moment we have lots and lots of different taxes each one feeding in to this big black hole that is public spending. I would like to see things (making up figures as I go so dont quote them)
37% of income tax funds the NHS
15% of Income tax funds the fire service
Nat ins pays for pensions and welfare
VAT pays for this
road tax pays for that
I just think if people knew and could see where each tax is spent and it was fully auditable then there would be less resistance to paying it.