I'd agree, but I'd set the % the same for everyone who pays income tax. Even simpler and less easy to dodge. (I would make 'people who pay income tax' all people who earn income from an employer, meaning a pressure for a rise in the minimum wage, but that's a separate discussion, as is what to do with the self-employed (pay them cash in hand seems to be a favoured answer)).My simplified tax system is this:
- Personal allowance of (just guessing here) £15,000 or £17,500?
- Abolish NI. Income tax records will become the sauce of state pension accruing rights data.
- Income tax starting at 25% graduated up 42.5%.
A a stroke; cutting all the thresholds/cliffs where people dance around avoiding a higher rate, reduce poverty, still incentivise people progressing in well paid careers or running businesses, a huge saving in DWP/HMRC admin, easier to follow and administer, making our tax codes slimmer (the second most complicated in the world).
But we have had the 'fairness' discussion, and whether 25% of £30,000 is more than 25% of 300,000 (some people think it is more, in 'meaningful' terms making it 'unfair') before, so I won't go there.
Bugger. Too late