THE TAX TRAP THAT SAPS THE ECONOMY (APPARENTLY)
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THE TAX TRAP THAT SAPS THE ECONOMY (APPARENTLY)
I wonder what the readership profile of
the Sunday Telegraph is. Why? Because of an article in a recent issue about
“The 62pc tax trap that secretly saps the economy”.
Does it really? Well, we are told that “Telegraph Money
reader Anthony Niven, a contractor, said he turned down work to ensure he did
not pay over the odds. “I always make
sure I make no more than £100,000 a year” he said. “What’s the point? The tax burden is just not worth it”. And Andrew Sprale said that he retired early
because “When you look at what you have to do to earn a good living and what is
actually left in your pocket, it hardly seems worth it under the current
system”.
We are also told that “it is mainly
small business owners and the self-employed who alter their behaviour to avoid
the higher rate tax, making sure their annual earnings do not stray into six
figures”.
So what is that tax trap that saps the
economy? If you have net taxable income
of more than £100,000, your £12,500 income tax personal allowance is gradually
withdrawn. You lose £1 of allowance for
every £2 in excess of £100,000. For a
40% taxpayer, the personal allowance gives a tax saving of a maximum of £5,000
(i.e. 40% of £12,500).
Just to put that in perspective:
Income Tax Average rate
First £12,500 nil nil
Next £37,500 20% 7,500
Next £50,000 40%
£20,000
100,000 27,500 27.5%
Next 10,000 60%
6,000
110,000 33,500 30.45
Next 15,000 60%
9,000
125,000 42,500 34%
Next 25,000 40% 10,000
£150,000 £52,500 35%
Above £150,000 the rate increases to 45%.
The so-called tax trap that is sapping
the economy is the 60% effective rate on the £100,001 to £125,000 tax bands,
i.e. 40% on each extra £100 of income plus the loss of tax relief on 50% of the
£100 (i.e. another £50x40%=20%).
The clawback is not new. It is a legacy of Alistair Darling’s spell as
Chancellor of the Exchequer. As such, it
has been with us since 6 April 2010, so it seems to have taken the Sunday
Telegraph 10 years to notice how damaging it is. Of course it is a needless complication of
the tax system. It is disappointing that
neither George Osborne nor Philip Hammond felt it appropriate to simplify the
tax system and find another way to raise this little bit of extra money from
the rich.
Yes, the rich! When it was introduced, the government
explained “the clause ensures that those with the highest 2 per cent of incomes
will no longer get twice the amount of benefit from the personal allowance that
a basic rate taxpayer with an income of £10,000 would receive. That 2 per cent may be a bit larger now. The latest HMRC statistics say that only 5%
of taxpayers have income of over £83,000.
So it may be 3% now. It is
undoubtedly well below 5%.
So are the bulk of the Sunday
Telegraph’s readers drawn from that 2% or 3% elite? If not, why devote half a page to bemoaning
how unjustly that 2% or 3% is treated.
The Office for National Statistics says
that average household income, i.e. the combined income of husband and wife, is
£29,400 if you take the median figure or £35,300 using the mean figure. Whichever figure you adopt, that means that
the 2% or 3% of people affected earn around three times the average of the
other 97% or 98%.
So does taking up to £5,000 extra tax
from the top 2-3% of income earners really sap the economy? I doubt it.
I have never come across anyone who wouldn’t want to earn an extra
£10,000 even if he or she gets to keep only £4,000 of it. I accordingly think that Mr Niven and Mr
Sprale are exceptions to the norm; not representative of it. Most of the small business owners that I know
either earn well below £100,000, or need the income to meet their living costs,
so I am intrigued to learn that it is mainly small business owners who shut up
shop at £100,000 of income, with no ambition to grow the business any
further. That is so alien to my own
experience.
I am perhaps most puzzled by Mr Niven
and Mr Sprale. I would be embarrassed to
publicly tell my friends and neighbours that, even though I am lucky enough to
be within the top 2-3% of earners in the country, I would rather stop working
than pay a few extra quid in tax to ease the tax burden of those a lot less
well off than myself.
ROBERT
MAAS
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