Machiavelli
Well-known member
thats rather the point, remove £40bn of tax revenue (~25% of ~£160bn raised), then everyone else is going to have to pay more in tax to cover the short fall (assuming no cuts to spending). look at the raw economics rather than the ideology, taking out all those earnings do not make higher earnings elsewhere in the companies, so the tax revenue is lost (it maye filter out in profits somewhere, not necessarily in the UK though). the bottom 50% pay in only ~10% and arent able to pay more, so the 2%-49% cohort are going to be paying an awful lot more income tax.
I find it staggering when people claim that they're engaging in 'raw economics' as opposed to 'ideology' as if these were entirely distinct fields. What you fail to understand is that: if capital was more widely spread more of it will be spent; if income was more widely spread more of it would be taxed; if property was more widely owned, more taxes could be raised on it. I could go on. Broadly this is what happened in the post-war consensus when One Nation Tories merely preserved the settlement instigated by the social-democratic Attlee government -- and during this period growth was much higher, and the Gini coefficient was much lower. I'm trying (but no doubt failing) to work on [MENTION=5200]Buzzer[/MENTION] with this post too.