deletebeepbeepbeep
Well-known member
- May 12, 2009
- 21,786
[tweet]1572986506867888129[/tweet]
Good thread ! A coincidence I am sure
That's a lot of Norwich scarfs and Delia Smith cookbooks.
[tweet]1572986506867888129[/tweet]
Good thread ! A coincidence I am sure
The theory being those on higher incomes will spend their gain going out and buying stuff I guess.
It's a bit of a unicorn theory though. Someone earning £1m gains £55k a year ( probably more if they're a banker ! ). After paying the increases in energy and the mortgage they may add a couple of extra foreign holidays - some of that expenditure will stay in the UK economy but most will leave it and go to the economy of the country they holiday in. Maybe a new car. After that I would imagine they will put the extra into low tax investments - thus removing the money from the economy for now. Basically the policy and theory it utterly nuts - as the markets proved yesterday.
It's a bit of a unicorn theory though. Someone earning £1m gains £55k a year ( probably more if they're a banker ! ). After paying the increases in energy and the mortgage they may add a couple of extra foreign holidays - some of that expenditure will stay in the UK economy but most will leave it and go to the economy of the country they holiday in. Maybe a new car. After that I would imagine they will put the extra into low tax investments - thus removing the money from the economy for now. Basically the policy and theory it utterly nuts - as the markets proved yesterday.
Low tax investments like VCTs, EISs, SEISs, ISAs & Pensions which all invest in UK companies, creating additional investment, corporation tax & income tax & NI to the treasury
The idea that any BBC news flagship programme is presenting a pro gov agenda suggesting a wider bias is laughable. Giving a voice to people who you don't agree with/ have an altetnative view is a public service .. less of the pearl clutching petal.
Indeed. Just looking at the graph and it's like WTF, but the reality is that 1p off of the basic rate is no bad thing, and claiming that removing the temporary hike in NI is some deal for the rich is disingenuous because the Torys put it there in the first place and it was only temporary. I would rather the 45% rate stayed because I think the high earners can easily afford it, but to be honest I wouldn't expect a Tory government to have the top rate that high and I'd expect a Labour government to put it back.something that shows is everyone is a bit better off, albeit unbalanced. way some of the commentary is framed, we're all losing money except the top bracket. as the upper tax braket is 150k, also shows distribution of the NI increase, it wasnt the regressive tax everyone claimed.
Low tax investments like VCTs, EISs, SEISs, ISAs & Pensions which all invest in UK companies, creating additional investment, corporation tax & income tax & NI to the treasury
Low tax investments like VCTs, EISs, SEISs, ISAs & Pensions which all invest in UK companies, creating additional investment, corporation tax & income tax & NI to the treasury
Low tax investments like VCTs, EISs, SEISs, ISAs & Pensions which all invest in UK companies, creating additional investment, corporation tax & income tax & NI to the treasury
Good old "trickle down economics"...
And virtually none of it will get to the people that need it - namely the not working, those on low incomes and now, even middle income earners. It's a policy to make the rich richer - nothing more than that.
There is no magic Money Tree. Those on low incomes will benefit further as & when the UK tax take increases.
The measures that the Chancellor has put in place will benefit the whole population in time.
There is no magic Money Tree. Those on low incomes will benefit further as & when the UK tax take increases.
The measures that the Chancellor has put in place will benefit the whole population in time.
I'm sorry but I'm not going to take a lesson in 'trickle down' economics from some who's sole purpose is to make wealthy people richer and to avoid paying tax. While tax avoidance isn't illegal you have to question the morality of the people that promote it and those that use it.
And virtually none of it will get to the people that need it - namely the not working, those on low incomes and now, even middle income earners. It's a policy to make the rich richer - nothing more than that.
There is no magic Money Tree. Those on low incomes will benefit further as & when the UK tax take increases.
The measures that the Chancellor has put in place will benefit the whole population in time.
View attachment 152159
There is no magic Money Tree. Those on low incomes will benefit further as & when the UK tax take increases.