A one-off "wealth tax" is the best way to patch up UK public finances battered by the coronavirus crisis? Rather than increasing income tax or VAT, the government should instead look at a tax on millionaire couples, the Wealth Tax Commission said. Taxing those households an extra 1% above a £1m threshold could raise £260bn over five years, it said.
The coronavirus crisis has led to soaring public spending. In 2020, the government is spending £280bn on measures to fight Covid-19 and to support the UK economy, including £73bn on job support schemes. The Wealth Tax Commission, a body made up of academics, policymakers and tax practitioners in the U.K., said that the government should consider a tax on the wealthy if it decides to raise taxes to try to get back some of this outlay.
This would be fairer than raising tax on incomes,
or goods people buy, or by increasing national insurance contributions, the
Wealth Tax Commission said. Dr Arun Advani, an assistant professor at the
University of Warwick, said: "We're often told that the only way to raise
serious tax revenue is from income tax, national insurance contributions, or
VAT.
"This simply isn't the case, so it is a political choice where to get the money from, if and when there are tax rises."
There are indications that the coronavirus crisis has already increased income inequality, with the Institute for Fiscal Studies reporting in June that the bottom 10% of earners were the most likely to have jobs in sectors that had shut down or could not be done from home.
A 1% per year tax rate could be imposed for five years on wealth of more than £1m per two-person household, the Wealth Commission said. That would be equivalent to raising VAT by 6p or the basic rate of income tax by 9p for the same period.
One-off taxes have been used after major crises
before, including in France, Germany and Japan after the Second World War and
in Ireland after the global financial crisis, it said. In December 2020, Argentina
passed a tax on the wealthiest to pay for medical supplies and relief measures amid the ongoing
coronavirus pandemic.
Source: https://www.utusanborneo.com.my
The suggested tax would include all assets such as main homes and pension “pots”, as well as business and financial wealth, but not debts such as mortgages. It would be paid by any UK resident.
The commission also proposed an alternative where a threshold of £4m would be set per household, assuming it contained two people with £2m each, taxed at a rate of 1% per year on wealth above that threshold. It said that a one-off wealth tax in this scenario would raise £80bn over five years after admin costs.
Dr Andy Summers, associate professor at the London School of Economics said: "A one-off wealth tax would work, raise significant revenue, and be fairer and more efficient than the alternatives." Rebecca Gowland from Oxfam said: "It is morally repugnant to allow the poorest people to continue to pay the price for the crisis, when it is clear that a fair tax on the richest could make such a difference."
However, Madsen Pirie, president of the Adam Smith Institute free market think tank, said the tax proposal goes against "what most people see as a fair principle: that buyers, sellers and facilitators of transactions take a cut - including the state through tax." He said the proposals amount to "attempting petty theft by instalments, only the numbers they're proposing to rob from people's pockets are pretty substantial." "Your cash in the bank is not stacked in vaults gathering dust, it is invested," he said. "If we tax those investments we end up with less produced, less produced means lower wages and lost pensions, that means a worse life for all of us. "Money would move out of the country at a time we really need more of it flooding in to help us rebuild after the pandemic ends. A wealth tax would leave the country a poorer place and the fact it would be brought in over a five year period reveals the true intention of it being a tax for all time," he added.
We need new tax measures in Malaysia. Otherwise, the Government will talk about GST and other regressive tax methods. The gap between the T20 and B40 is widening especially with the pandemic. Can’t we be more courageous with a “super-profit” tax on the “Top Gloves” of the world, banks and those who are reaping extraordinary gains from the pandemic? Why must the poor suffer a double whammy – the pandemic and job loss.
Hotels, travel, aviation, entertainment and many
others are financially devastated. Businesses have folded-up and people are
unemployed. It is time for the rich (with assets of RM5million or more) to bear
part of the burden.
Reference:
“Tax
the wealthy to pay for coronavirus”,
BBC, 9 December 2020 ( https://www.bbc.com)
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