Wednesday,
12 FEBRUARY 2014
Taxes have been around forever. They date back to the Bronze Age when HMRC staff taxed Celtic metal-working and agriculture to fund the causeway across the North Channel.
More
recently, two years ago there were heated exchanges south of the
border as the deadline for the Irish Government's €100 household
charge was
fast approaching. Opposition TDs, councillors and trade unionists
urged people to boycott the payment, and it's not hard to understand
why.
Regardless of whether you were living in a mansion or a crap bungalow girt by concrete, your household still had to pay €100. It was in no way linked to ability to pay. If you were using a moral compass on this, in boom times the needle would be off north, but for workers struggling through a recession it would be spinning in circles as subjects try to escape the influence of resident witchcraft while filming themselves on shaky cam.
At the same time across the pond, Tory finance minister George Osborne announced a reduction to the income tax rate of high earners, concurrent with an attack on disabled people's welfare that was so vile that even Satan was scratching his goatee in disbelief. Perhaps even more surprisingly, that Bill drew over half a dozen rejections in the House of Lords.
Regardless of whether you were living in a mansion or a crap bungalow girt by concrete, your household still had to pay €100. It was in no way linked to ability to pay. If you were using a moral compass on this, in boom times the needle would be off north, but for workers struggling through a recession it would be spinning in circles as subjects try to escape the influence of resident witchcraft while filming themselves on shaky cam.
At the same time across the pond, Tory finance minister George Osborne announced a reduction to the income tax rate of high earners, concurrent with an attack on disabled people's welfare that was so vile that even Satan was scratching his goatee in disbelief. Perhaps even more surprisingly, that Bill drew over half a dozen rejections in the House of Lords.
This
train rattles on with the Tories rolling out a predictable diatribe
against Labour’s
plan to restore the 50p tax rate,
with the trickle-down effect representing the neighbourhood bogeyman
that Reagan talked about but no one has ever seen.
Tax should be based on ability to pay. Instead, in the UK we play musical chairs with people ending up sitting on seats shaped for those with more girth (of the financial kind).
Tax should be based on ability to pay. Instead, in the UK we play musical chairs with people ending up sitting on seats shaped for those with more girth (of the financial kind).
The
country may claim to be a lower taxing state but meanwhile it charges
all kinds of indirect taxes like National Insurance contributions,
property rates, annual car taxes, sizeable levies on fuel, and even
something as ridiculous as a TV license fee to watch free-to-air
television.
Seriously,
a fee to watch state TV. What? I pay it because I'm a patriot, but
the numbers of people you hear about who refuse to pay as they
nervously dim the lights and jump when their nanna raps the door on a
Sunday with her key lime pie is astounding. Just pay for it from
direct tax to the public purse.
Indirect
tax is unfair as long as it’s not based on ability to pay. Take for
example someone who works in home care, driving from house to house
providing care at home for the elderly and some of the most
vulnerable in our society. The worker is likely to be a woman, and
may be working for a private company, paid the minimum wage, not
reimbursed for fuel costs incurred on the job, not guaranteed any
hours in her contract if she even has one, and not provided
appropriate training in order to do the job safely and confidently.
And that’s without some recalcitrant making
off with her car in Finaghy.
No reimbursement for fuel costs effectively means she is earning less than the minimum wage, yet she still has to pay similar high fuel costs, car tax, car insurance, property rates and TV licensing fee that high income earners do. An unfair scenario any way you look at it, unless you're a hair-piece high on the crack of casino capitalism.
And not even the vulnerable elderly receiving the care are protected, with this race to the bottom resulting in a shocking decline in care standards. And the Northern Ireland Executive wants more of it - its Compton Review suggests saving money by taking work from reputable public operators and outsourcing it to a market featuring “too many agencies involved … who simply aren’t meeting the standards”.
We need to learn from our mistakes of late and start pursuing fairer tax. This means reforming our tax system to minimise indirect tax, raise revenue by fair and progressive income tax, and pursue tax evasion with an aggressive and well-funded strategy. It will mean a fairer society for all. And maybe a new causeway to Scotland.
No reimbursement for fuel costs effectively means she is earning less than the minimum wage, yet she still has to pay similar high fuel costs, car tax, car insurance, property rates and TV licensing fee that high income earners do. An unfair scenario any way you look at it, unless you're a hair-piece high on the crack of casino capitalism.
And not even the vulnerable elderly receiving the care are protected, with this race to the bottom resulting in a shocking decline in care standards. And the Northern Ireland Executive wants more of it - its Compton Review suggests saving money by taking work from reputable public operators and outsourcing it to a market featuring “too many agencies involved … who simply aren’t meeting the standards”.
We need to learn from our mistakes of late and start pursuing fairer tax. This means reforming our tax system to minimise indirect tax, raise revenue by fair and progressive income tax, and pursue tax evasion with an aggressive and well-funded strategy. It will mean a fairer society for all. And maybe a new causeway to Scotland.
We need to forget about politics as a method of social progress. Enact a Resource Based Economy, and ensure that every single man, woman and child on this planet lives to their full potential.
ReplyDeleteThe flat charge for the property tax in the South was a temporary measure only applied for 18 months. The tax is now based on the market value of your home. This is a fair system. Im sure you are aware of this and omitted it from your post as it did not fit your narrative. Politics failure 101
ReplyDeleteDispicable! I grew up in Finaghy, i've not heard the like it years. They pray On women and the vulnerable. The car thieves are the veritable dregs of society.
ReplyDeleteI hear your message on tax loud and clear, the economic unionist makes more sense now.
On another note is increasing the minimum price of alcohol also an increase On it's indirect tax? After the DJ Hardwell gig in the Odyssey people have raised the question of raising the drink price, bypassing any talk about how the children were supplied with the drink and enforce laws banning drinking on 'party coaches'. UTV and Edwin Poots did address those but some in the DUP have wanted the prices to go up for a while. The only losers though are responsible drinkers, people who have to fork out almost £4 for a pint in Belfast now. It damages the social life of Belfast when the locals can't afford to drink there!
ReplyDeleteLegalise Cannabis and tax it. I'll vote for ye no sweat.
ReplyDeleteLegalising Cannabis would make a pretty penny. I'll vote for ye if you promise to sort that out.
ReplyDelete