I look at the state of this country
- ever worsening road conditions
- the NHS is falling apart and set to get worse ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-38887694)
- councils struggling to make ends meet
This list goes on and on. Is it not time that successive governments stopped giving tax reducing sweeteners and made the decision to raise the basic rate income tax?
all the things i really want, need public investment.
i want: better schools, hospitals, transport, national parks, environmental protection, etc.
from a selfish point of view, i want to pay more taxes.
I look at the state of this country- ever worsening road conditions
- the NHS is falling apart and set to get worse ( http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-38887694)
- councils struggling to make ends meetThis list goes on and on. Is it not time that successive governments stopped giving tax reducing sweeteners and made the decision to raise the basic rate income tax?
I completely agree, and I would be happy to pay that, if it meant improving the NHS and other services, and better environmental regulation. However, good luck at the next election to any Government who does it (which is probably why they haven't done).
I'd happily pay more tax if I was confident it wouldn't go towards buying pensioners votes and keeping the banks in business.
As above really.
Too much Me! Me! Me! in the electorate I'm afraid for people to consider voting for taxation.
APF
+1 for Jam bo
I think there will be a tipping point where people just look at everything crumbling around them and reality will dawn that everyone needs to pay more into the system.However, good luck at the next election to any Government who does it (which is probably why they haven't done).
Maybe a gov petition should be started to that affect stating that those who have signed are happy to have an increase in income tax, provided xyz.
The problem is you can throw all the money you like at the NHS, but until stuff like PFI(2), shitty procurement deals and outsourcing to private companies at greater costs is dealt with it's just not going to help in the long run.
...also, as per jambo.
Short-termism is the death of progressive policy.
Yep, tax should be increased - the 40% tax should be raised as anyone on 40% can afford 2% more. It should somehow be ring-fenced though otherwise it will get swallowed and used for things I wouldn't want it used for.
1% could go on NHS
1% could go on elderly care
It's the fundamental problem with politics and politicians (mostly). They want to be elected, so will say what the public wants to hear in order to win power. Any political party that says they're going to raise taxes is on to a loser, end of. Even though is plainly obvious that we need more spending, Joe Public thinks there's a never ending pot of cash because "I've been paying in for 30 years" 🙄
We need more spending, not less. But we need to spend money that actually exists!
Say it quietly, but the Lib Dems had 'a penny more on income tax' as one of their key policies for many years...before they joined the coalition...
I'd be all for it, I think a 2% rise for all those earning over £20,000 (including 40% to 42% increase) would do the job.
What would do the job even better though would be to get Starbucks et al to pay their 'fair share' of UK corporation tax.
Here's another idea whilst we're at it...why don't we take the £350 bazillion a week we won't be paying to the EU and spend it on the NHS????? 🙄
Nope, the time has come for the Govt to spend our money more wisely and often not to spend it at all.
FWIW I've worked in both central Govt and the NHS (along with the private sector) - so seen waste from all sides.
[I]I'd be all for it, I think a 2% rise for all those earning over £20,000 (including 40% to 42% increase) would do the job.[/I]
So practically everyone then, since minimum wage (for over 25's) will be nigh on £16k in April.
Maybe we could have a two tier system? Those who don't think we are taxed enough could pay an extra 5%.
Everyone is in favour of better services. Most don't want to pay more tax when actually voting in an election. Or else a party with a tax raising manifesto would be elected.
The problem is you can throw all the money you like at the NHS, but until stuff like PFI(2), shitty procurement deals and outsourcing to private companies at greater costs is dealt with it's just not going to help in the long run
My Brothers an accountant in the HHS. October is when he says it's going to go bust, in England anyway.
My answer is no, the extra money will just disappear without giving any extra value. There is massive waste in government spending, pouring good money after bad is not the solution.
What we need is a new kind of leader to shake things up, he might have small hands, but they would be beautiful, so beautiful that they would seem like the biggest hands; wonderful hands even, so amazing they would just take away all your concerns, it will be amazing, incredible even, you'll see...
Provided they abandon the triple lock and stop bribing pensioners with our money, sure.
Oh yes I would be more than happy to give an extra £50 a week in taxes ,as long as it helped fund the 50" tv brigade in Blackpool fund their 8 different coloured children and pay for more Regal kings sized. Maybe even adding a little toward Johnny shitkicker get over his tyre kicking habbit.How about capping what the halfwits in Parliament can claim for ,that should free up a few quid eh
You are Paul Dacre and I claim my £5.
As above - throwing money at a broken institution is not going to help, NHS being a prime example.
It won't happen, not whilst Chairwomen May is in charge, God won't let her.
It's not how it works anyway, we're at .25% base rate to try to preserve spending, they're not going cut it by 2-3%.
A50 will be triggered soon, that much is certain sadly - the chancellor has already said austerity plans are going out the window - any new public spending will be funded with national debt, not taxation - we'll pay it off when we're booming again (or rather won't, it'll be kicked down the road again).
The NHS has a funding problem, because they want it to have one - it's about to get royally ****ed and even more privatised to secure a "good" trade deal with the US to 'prove' May was right all along. 65 Million people, having their future and health put at risk, to try to secure a full term for an unelected Prime Minister.
In 10 years’ time, when the NHS is like NHS dentistry, a much smaller service to help the poor, young and old and we're all paying £100s a month for insurance, remember, we did all this, because the Tories couldn't live with the UKIP threat and Labour couldn't mobilise to offer any meaningful opposition.
b r - Member
I'd be all for it, I think a 2% rise for all those earning over £20,000 (including 40% to 42% increase) would do the job.So practically everyone then, since minimum wage (for over 25's) will be nigh on £16k in April.
1.Yes it would affect a lot of folk.
2. Min wage is not set as an annual salary, millions of part-timers earn less than your plucked from the air 16K, and are not part-time out of choice, they would prefer full-time work (or a non-zero hours contract) but can't get one.
Any extra tax we paid now would just go towards funding the massive fiscal disaster that Brexit will become.
I'm totally for this. However, in addition I want to see HMRC close the loopholes that allow corporations and wealthy individuals to opt out of the tax system.
Perhaps closing loop holes and ensuring corporate tax is paid would be better than taxing the working man?
Tax is not the issue. The countries tax intake is at an all time high - or just about to hit an all time high, and it is still not enough. When are we going to realise we need to re-structure/reform many of our old and outdated institutions that are not fit for purpose in the modern world. The NHS is one, the benefits system (which costs us more than the NHS) is another. Until we sort out these institutions that are just sinking tax payers money with no real improvements, then things will never improve.
Something like a half of our spend is on the NHS and benefits, a good chunk of the other half is on our pensions liabilities and everything else, education, defence, police infrastructure maintenance (forget improvements) etc. has to try to jossle for a share of the scraps.
People talk about austerity as if there is a viable or real alternative option for us.
We're a rich and successful country, we're just mismanaging it.
mattyfez - Member
As above - throwing money at a broken institution is not going to help, NHS being a prime example.
but this winters NHS problems are because of cuts to local councils that have resulted in these unprecedented levels of bed blocking and the choking of the system.
reforms to the whole model are needed but 'austerity' is a con in many ways, see also sure start centres etc
Raising income tax by, say 2% won't increase total revenue by 2% though. You'll just have less to spend. Most of what we earn eventually goes to the treasury; you buy something and pay VAT, the shop pays tax on its profits, the staff pay tax on their wages and so on. So there is an argument for decreasing income tax to boost spending and the economic growth.
BTW the NHS isn't broken, it works fairly well. It can seem a bit bureaucratic at times, but most large organisations are.
What it suffers from is being a political pawn and if you think their procurement is wasteful, try being a 120bn a year turn-over ‘business’ employing 1.4 million people that has to change it’s plans every 3-8 years when the next guy comes along who thinks He or She knows best (or rather wants to further their own goals by saying it).
If Westminster really wanted a efficient, well run NHS, they should give it a % of GDP, taxation or whatever that befits our needs for healthcare - set it for 10 years, and **** off and leave it to provide our healthcare, not micromanage it for political gain.
BTW the NHS isn't broken, it works fairly well. It can seem a bit bureaucratic at times, but most large organisations are.
+1
All organisations are inefficient, the larger they are the more so. No way to really avoid it. Privatisation just adds in larger inefficiencies (profit for share holders)....
[i]Min wage is not set as an annual salary, millions of part-timers earn less than your plucked from the air 16K, [/I]
£7.50 per hour for a full-time employee is £15,600
[url= https://c1.staticflickr.com/9/8512/8361851095_818227afbb_b.jp g" target="_blank">https://c1.staticflickr.com/9/8512/8361851095_818227afbb_b.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/dJUF1t ]Benefit spending breakdown 2011-2012[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/brf/ ]Ben Freeman[/url], on Flickr
Love that pie chart, specifically the monster slice that is national debt interest.
What we need to do is forget red/blue bickering and accept we've collectively f'd up. Accept ~5yrs of fairly brutal cuts AND tax increases, and then when we are done we'll have a nice big piece of pie for us all to share.
Everyone always wants more, they want it better, and they want to help people not so fortunate. But there's only so long we can go on spending imaginary money kidding ourselves into thinking everything is great. As it stands, every year, the interest slice gets bigger, and every other slice gets smaller, the longer we ignore it, the longer we'll be screwed for to put it right.
Provided they abandon the triple lock and stop bribing pensioners with our money, sure.
^^ this
Why would you increase it at the low end?
One thing I'm fed up with is the constant bad news stories from the BBC about the NHS. From my contact with the NHS its a wonderful system. Nothings perfect but they must be doing something right. How about a few success stories for balance?
fifeandy - MemberLove that pie chart, specifically the monster slice that is national debt interest.
What we need to do is forget red/blue bickering and accept we've collectively f'd up. Accept ~5yrs of fairly brutal cuts AND tax increases, and then when we are done we'll have a nice big piece of pie for us all to share.
I agree with you in spirit, but national economics isn't the same as household economics you can't just tighten your belt for a few months or years and right the ship that way - spending is tied to income.
Tax rises, reduces consumer spending, reduces tax revenues, slows economy, means job loses etc - if you raise the rate, your actual income could just as likely fall - some brilliant minds (honestly, Carney and his guys are very bright people) advise on tax rates to ensure the maximum return, not just to keep the population happy.
Cuts, equally don't help - cuts means less jobs, more benefits as well as reduction in services - a lot of services are self-funded their costs are more than recouped by avoiding bigger costs later on, but cuts mean a reduction to urgent services only so the £5 a week Fat Fighters classes are cut, but you can't cut the Ambo and A&E trip for the heart attack it would have avoided.
It's a very complex problem - if you think you can offer a solution in a few paragraphs, you've not even scratched the surface.
Accept ~5yrs of fairly brutal cuts AND tax increases,
Problem is cuts hurt those who are already very vulnerable.
I'd be willing to pay 60-70% tax or even more if I thought the spending policies and priorities were right.
Id agree, its a very complex problem and its not just a case of throwing more money at the problem.
I'd certainly favour more money going to preventive measures - like a tax on sugar etc. If your a lifestyle problem, smoke, obese, then you should pay.
If we just cut missed appointments it saved a huge amount of money and waste.
I was surprised the NHS didn't colle3ct money from foreign patients not entitled to NHS treatment. Recent experience in Canada - no insurance, no $500 or no credit card = no treatment. And that was at reception.
There's an existing mechanism for the people who want to pay a bit more:
http://www.dmo.gov.uk/index.aspx?page=CRND/CRND_Portfolio/Donations
More income tax no thanks, anyway it just drives people to be more tax efficient.
NHS needs to be scrapped for an EU style system. It would be better to be honest that the NHS is not going to last, and put something better in place, rather than let it slowly fall apart to the point that it is unfixable.
Biggest win with NHS would be make it managed by cross party committee, not by government alone. Would reduce it being used as a vote winner with initiatives driven by headlines not by good care.
The foreign patient thing - it's about 0.5% of total NHS spend - it could be better but there are much bigger opportunities for improvement - just they don't suit the daily mail headlines!
There is a philosophical debate to be had about what the NHS should and shouldn't fund but it probably rates second to tax rises on the political suicide top ten!
One thing I'm fed up with is the constant bad news stories from the BBC about the NHS.
How else are they going to get the public onboard with the upcoming wholesale privitisation? They need to turn everyone against it first.

