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Should I forgive the Conservatives?
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molgripsFree Member
How many people are motivated to work harder or create businesses when they will have to give up 60% of what they earn in tax?
I just don’t get this argument at all. If I was on £50k a year, had the opportunity to go for a £150k a year job, because I’d ‘only’ get an extra £40k a year in my pocket, would I say no? Would I hell. You still get more money – just not all of it.
I used to work with a bloke who didn’t bother playing the Lottery any more because £3m wasn’t worth bothering with 🙄
Austerity = living within your means
Not quite that simple, really. Austerity means making cuts to balance the budget rather than creating and then banking on future growth. Both can work (in government and business) but they have different consequences.
And of course you knew that, cos you’re not stupid – you’re just being disingenuous to back up your pre-existing beliefs. As most people do, so don’t take that as an insult.
cheekyboyFree MemberOverrated anyway, forgiveness.
It also requires the application of pre-paid santimony 😆
People don’t seem to able to grasp the extent we where outspending our earnings under Labour.
Who is we ?
poor use of where/were there Jambers 😆molgripsFree MemberAnyway – to answer the OP – I’d forgive the Tories if they stopped being Tories. I’m compassionate like that.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberGoogle income and substitution effects then mol….
The explanation in the Mirlees Report is well worth reading as this relates these effects to (re)distribution too. compared with a lot of economics, tax design is actually quite interesting especially the behavioural aspects
http://www.ifs.org.uk/uploads/mirrleesreview/design/ch2.pdf
Some will not like his explanation of how a flat rate tax can be progressive but never mind – teach a man to fish….
JunkyardFree MemberPeople don’t seem to able to grasp the extent we where outspending our earnings under Labour. It’s quite scary how much people believe that was normal and to cut spending from those levels is austerity.
Osbourne agreeing to match Labour spending plans pre crash
Nice attempt to re write history
The economy collapse caused the mess and no one foresaw it. Most folks think that to have balanced the books would have done more harm than good, hence the slow cut [ and even the tories doing it slower than they said they would] rather than a slash and burn approach to balance the books.
Some still use it as a stick,for entirely political motives, to beat labour
Austerity = living within your means
is it living within your means to have a mortgage or is it reckless borrowing to live outside ones means?
molgripsFree MemberGoogle income and substitution effects then mol
I have.. still not sure what you’re getting at though.
seosamh77Free Memberernie_lynch – Member
I don’t blame the Conservatives for behaving like I would expect them to behave.
That doesn’t really make sense, you are basically saying it’s alright to be a **** as long as you declare you are a ****! 😆 It’s not alright!teamhurtmoreFree MemberI edited the post with the link – these effects explain how people react/what happens when you change the tax rate. How they balance and how they need to be taken into account when thinking about redistribution of income and tax design. joking apart, it is actually very interesting as is working out the optimum marginal rate of tax. (its not 50% BTW)
molgripsFree MemberHmm.. but does it take into account people’s perception of the value for money they get from taxation?
teamhurtmoreFree MemberAusterity was designed to address other things.
Austerity in itself is unlikely to increase growth, why? Because it involves cutting spending and/or raising taxes both of which are withdrawals from the economy. They both reduce aggregate demand.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberNo (at least not directly, yes indirectly) they relate to the supply of labour and the change in the tax rate.
NorthwindFull Memberjust5minutes – Member
What, like the top 1% now paying 30% of all tax and the top 14% of earners now paying 62% of tax?
Top earners are paying substantially more now in real terms than they ever did under Labour…
https://fullfact.org/factchecks/income_tax_are_the_top_1_really_paying_more-29302
According to this- while the top 1% are paying more tax, their actual proportion of tax is unchanged since the 1980s. In other words, if correct, the increase in tax they pay is because they’re richer, not because they’re paying proportionally more tax.
The top 1% pay 30% of income tax, but the bottom 50% pay 10%. The top 1% have average earnings of £248,000. The bottom 50% have average earnings of, I think, about £17000. (*) So the top 1% pays proportionally 3 times more income tax on average while earning 14.5 times more on average
(* I’ve little confidence in this number. So let’s run it again with a dependable number. The 5th percentile income is about £22000. The average of the bottom 50% can only be lower than this, but it gives you 11 times instead of 14.5. The actual figure may well be worse than 14.5; it can’t be better than 11)
Anyone see any issues with these numbers? Strikes me as a much more reasonable way to look at this than “1% pays 30%” which ignores actual incomes and take-homes.
JunkyardFree MemberDont you be bringing facts into this NW remember the rich are what we depend on as they are admirable creators of wealth and if we try to tax them these noble folk will just leave and/or avoid tax 😕
Remember unequal income distributions are natural and normal
High rates of tax are both unfair [ they [pay so much already] and will get you less money
Rockape63Free MemberI just don’t get this argument at all. If I was on £50k a year, had the opportunity to go for a £150k a year job, because I’d ‘only’ get an extra £40k a year in my pocket, would I say no? Would I hell. You still get more money – just not all of it.
Not quite as simple as that. No one is going to offer you three times more to do the same job, you would need to be taking on potentially: more responsibility/more stress/more hours/more grief. Some would say they’d rather have a considerably easier life on £40k less. (Ask Junky!)
El-bentFree MemberHow many people are motivated to work harder or create businesses when they will have to give up 60% of what they earn in tax?
Apparently, to get the wealthy to work more, you have to give them more, and to get the poor to work more, you have to give them less.
That is the Tory way. The tories and their voters are an affront to Human decency.
richmtbFull MemberWatching IDS on Andrew Marr re-enforced my hatred of all things Conservative. Sometimes watching Davieboys matey bonhomie its possible to forget just what a bunch of heartless shitehawks the majority of them are.
Their heartlessness is neatly summed up by the Bedroom Tax in three easy steps
1. Penalise social housing tenants for living in houses larger than they need when no smaller houses are available.
2.Introduce a policy that causes hardship and anxiety for hundreds of thousands of people that saves virtually no money
3. Don’t build any new social housingA fabulous wheeze I’m sure you will agree, no doubt the further £12bn in welfare cuts will involve some more jolly japes. Although like the loveable joker he is IDS wasn’t willing to spoil the joke by telling us what his actual plans were
teamhurtmoreFree MemberFrom the ONS
•Before taxes and benefits the richest fifth of households had an average income of £81,300 in 2012/13, almost 15 times greater than the poorest fifth who had an average income of £5,500.
•Overall, taxes and benefits lead to income being shared more equally between households. After all taxes and benefits are taken into account the ratio between the average incomes of the top and the bottom fifth of households (£59,900 and £15,600 per year respectively) is reduced to four-to-one.
•Fifty-two per cent of households received more in benefits (including in-kind benefits such as education) than they paid in taxes in 2012/13. This is equivalent to 13.8 million households.
•The average disposable income in 2012/13 was unchanged from 2011/12, but it remains lower than at the start of the economic downturn, with equivalised disposable income falling by £1,200 since 2007/08 in real terms. The fall in income has been largest for the richest fifth of households (5.2%). In contrast, after accounting for inflation and household composition, the average income for the poorest fifth has grown over this period (3.5%).
•There was a slight increase in income inequality between 2011/12 and 2012/13, based on some inequality measures. Despite this, income inequality is broadly unchanged from other recent years.
edit: the bedroom what?
wanmankylungFree MemberI’m intrugued to find out where Jeremy Hunt thinks he’s going to find more than £22bn in efficiency savings in the NHS…
edit: the bedroom what?
richmtbFull Memberedit: the bedroom what?
You can call it the “abolition of spare room subsidy” if you like.
The point still stands unchallenged
teamhurtmoreFree MemberNo wonder the SNP have such an easy time of things, if folk fall for that! Nice new mirror BTW!
wanmankylungFree MemberI’m just interested to know what you think of the living wage.
binnersFull Memberrichmtb – as well as the thing they love more than anything – punishing the poor for being poor, theres also the delightful wheeze of punishing the disabled for being disabled. Another ideologically driven piece of nonsense that has caused untold misery to some of the most disadvantaged people in society. It was meant to save billions. Its actually saved the some total of **** all.
Mrs Binners works with disabled charities, and its absolutely scandalous what the Tories have done. The whole ATOS evaluation thing was expressly designed to get genuinely disabled and sick people off benefits, with not a care as to what impact that would have on their lives! While the whole process has been a massive farce, Its had a massively detrimental effect on some of the most vulnerable member s of our society, who are being forced to jump through increasing numbers of hoops just to live.
I ****ing loath IDS and his (typically Tory) lofty, uncaring arrogance. A truly vile human being!
aracerFree MemberDon’t understand the point you’re making here.
[/quote]I presumed you were suggesting funding the gap between income and expenditure by stopping people avoiding tax – apologies if that wasn’t the case and your mention of tax avoidance was nothing to do with the post you quoted.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberDepends on at what level it is set and the elasticity of demand and supply for labour. So need a little bit more info….
You cannot answer yes/no, like/dislike etc
aracerFree MemberWell there are 50 times as many people in the bottom 50% as in the top 1%, so cumulatively the top 1% earn 0.3 times what the bottom 50% do, yet pay 3 times as much tax. Nothing wrong with that, but it shows that the point you seem to be trying to make is incorrect. If I’ve understood correctly the point you’re trying to make – which may not be the case!
jimwFree MemberIt seems that on the first day of electioneering, the tories have been a bit fast and loose with their claims, at least according to the IFS
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/david-camerons-claim-that-labour-would-raise-taxes-by-3000-is-not-sensible-says-the-ifs-10144367.htmlBut then, when has telling the truth ever been a priority for Mr. Shapps. Apparently when challenged on the figure of £3000 he admitted it was a guess ” because Labour hadn’t been specific about their plans'”!
gordimhorFull MemberMr Shapps being a bit “over firm” again? I will not forgive him for his abuse of english for a start
wanmankylungFree MemberDepends on at what level it is set and the elasticity of demand and supply for labour.
I’m not an economist, so you’re going to have to explain that to me.
MSPFull MemberYou would have more chance getting a factual answer from an alchemist than an economist.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberWell based on MSP’s, I wont bother. Other than repeating what I said – you cannot make a comment about the living wage without knowing other facts. But why do you ask?
DrJFull Memberwell worth reading as this relates these effects to (re)distribution too. compared with a lot of economics, tax design is actually quite interesting especially the behavioural aspects
Interesting – possibly. Convincing – not so much. If economists could actually understand complicated non-linear systems they would have figured out how to ruin the country properly. Which they clearly haven’t.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberDrJ – Member
Interesting – possibly. Convincing – not so muchyou decide, its one of the most authoritative studies on Uk tax published recently – your shout.
If economists could actually understand complicated non-linear systems they would have figured out how to ruin the country properly. Which they clearly haven’t.
well that’s a relief, why would you want them to ruin the country?
plenty of economists saw what was coming (including within the BoE) and many made lots of money as a result
nick1962Free MemberThe ATOS evaluation thing that New Labour introduced ?
Yes and it’s been pointed out to binners before but that doesn’t stop him blaming IDS and the Tories 🙂
MSPFull MemberIt was a bad policy by nu labour, but the tories really turned the screw.
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