The UK tax system is a con | Economics | New Statesman

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  • čas přidán 23. 05. 2024
  • A tax system that allows millionaire Rishi Sunak to pay a lower tax rate than working people is in dire need of reform, says Harry Lambert.
    Subscribe here: / @newstatesman
    “If everyone in the country understood how the tax code worked, it wouldn't last very long.” - Harry Lambert
    Did you know that the burden of council tax is about ten times as heavy in poorer areas as in richer ones? Did you know that Rishi Sunak’s effective tax rate was 23% last year, which is lower than the tax rate you pay if you earn £37,000 in income?
    Harry Lambert speaks to Freddie Hayward about his cover story for the New Statesman and explains how the UK’s tax system entrenches inequality, stymies growth, and rewards a few at the expense of the many.
    Read the piece here: www.newstatesman.com/politics...
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Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @NewStatesman
    @NewStatesman  Před 2 měsíci +3

    Watch next: “Are they stupid?!” - Liz Truss economics explained czcams.com/video/hcLw8cT5Lgs/video.html

    • @livefreeordie5769
      @livefreeordie5769 Před měsícem +1

      Taxes * Income Tax * Capital Gains Tax * National Insurance * VAT * Council Tax * Corporation Tax * Dividend Tax * Bank payroll Tax * Petroleum Revenue Tax * Fuel Duties * Vehicle Tax - VED * SORN - Vehicles parked off road * Vehicle Registration * Vehicle MOT * Inheritance Tax * Stamp Duty * Tobacco Duties * Spirits Duties * Beer Duties * Wines Duties * Cider Duties * Betting & Gaming Duties * Air Passenger Duty * Insurance Premium Tax * Landfill Tax * Climate Change Levy * Aggregates Tax * Congestion Charge * ULEZ Stealth Taxes * Income Tax Threshold Freezes * Personal Savings Interest Threshold * Lifetime Allowance on Pensions * Parking Fines * Speeding Fines * Box Junction Fines * LTN Fines * AI Cameras.

    • @Wayne-wm6wq
      @Wayne-wm6wq Před měsícem +1

      Where does it say in law that you have to pay it please

  • @isoconfused8744
    @isoconfused8744 Před 8 měsíci +68

    I plan on leaving the UK after living here 42 years. I have had enough of this countries rule, government and the whole lot!

    • @georgek3398
      @georgek3398 Před 2 měsíci +9

      I left during the thatcher years , came to Canada and never looked back

    • @jobbingactor
      @jobbingactor Před měsícem +4

      Where we going i’m coming with you.

    • @allisonbadgett2356
      @allisonbadgett2356 Před měsícem

      Bingo-that really is the answer history tells us this-Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire-excessive taxes eventually kill your country bc wealthy can leave so economy of country falls

    • @abringering2164
      @abringering2164 Před měsícem +2

      Forget Canada and their stupid Trudeau. Canadians are moving to America. We’d love to show you what financial freedom looks like.

    • @martinnicholls9056
      @martinnicholls9056 Před měsícem +2

      You wouldn't want to move to New Zealand by any chance? If you do things are arguably a lot worse. We have become locked into Neoliberalism since 1984 and one of the parties (the ACT Party) was born out of the ashes of a betraying Labour Party that preceded it and we had an even worse government that followed - a National government with Ruth Richardson as Finance Minister where neoliberalism was expressed in an even more extreme and cruel way. She was so awful that not even Prime Minister, Jim Bolger, could stomach her any longer and sacked her.
      This is when our society became really unequal, but we had a voting system (MMP) that locked in a situation of political timidity that panders to the middle, swinging voters so nothing ever gets done, except for the benefit of the rich and so-called middle voters whose interests are purely for themselves and what they can get out of the government's so-called promises.
      The latest government has a National prime minister who was CEO of Air New Zealand and wants to run the government along corporate lines. National has two coalition partners who claim to have a mandate for their vile policies, including trashing the environment and destroying what's left of out natural biodiversity for so-called development projects (chosen by three undemocratic ministers) including mining, and more roads at the expense of rail, coastal shipping, cycling and walking - all at the expense of managing CO2 emissions and consequent global warming. They're also taking an axe to the health system, social welfare, all for protecting the interests of the wealthy. If they have a plan for anything, they haven't communicated it to long-suffering New Zealanders. They're New Zealand's answer to Boeing, but we can only hope that either they develop some sense and compassion or they're voted out as a one-term government. The two coalition partners (ACT and New Zealand First) claim to have been given a mandate to put forward their insane and insulting policies that retraumatises Maori in a racist and neo-colonial fit of pique by the ACT leader, but, between them, they only got around 17% of the vote, compared with the more left wing Green Party that got over 13% alone. Their claim to have a mandate is hardly credible and they are the tail of a very small chihuahua wagging a large St Bernard, nevertheless they hold the balance of power. All three coalition partners are New Zealand's political answer to Boeing and just as incompetent and, dare I say, corrupt.
      It is hard to believe that the British Tories are any worse than what we have here, but hearing Liz Truss and Jacob Rees-Mogg speak I'm hardly filled with confidence. It seems as if it's Prince Andrew running the country and determining policy.

  • @blackbeard6423
    @blackbeard6423 Před 5 měsíci +60

    I am particularly upset as high earner. I just worked over a year to earn a significant bonus. The tax burden is so high, it prevents me or anyone from ever becoming wealthy as an employee. The only path to true wealth is via the limited company/corporation.

    • @user-wj7cv9hb5j
      @user-wj7cv9hb5j Před měsícem

      Ir35 destroyed a lot of workers. Tax is 2 high.. not worth working, let others pay the tax for benefits.. everyone should do it, make life a lot less stressful.

    • @tarquin161234
      @tarquin161234 Před měsícem

      Don't forget trusts and offshoring, which is where most of the country's hidden wealth and corruption, centered in the City of London, right under our very noses.

    • @SibylleHyde
      @SibylleHyde Před měsícem +2

      It's true. Work is taxed much more highly compared to income from property.

    • @SibylleHyde
      @SibylleHyde Před měsícem +2

      @@johntbaxter Actually no. When I was working my marginal tax rate was 48%. Now that I live of capital gains it's 10% when I sell assets.

    • @AntonyClayton-eq1ul
      @AntonyClayton-eq1ul Před měsícem

      For profit corporation of the treasury is double-dealing. Tricking natural, living breathing men / women workers into accepting imposed liability to pay, on the part of a 'person' - a legal fiction corporate entity. But you are not liable, being not a "person". Or body of "persons" corporate or un incorporate. However, the choice is a personal one. But keep feeding the cash hungry monster and it will devour you all. It is following the WEF-led plan of you all owing NOTHING - not even the work you do; and being happy about it. Caveat emptor.

  • @kamranhussain7236
    @kamranhussain7236 Před 7 měsíci +34

    The irony that an ad popped up halfway through this video claiming you can make 1 million tax free through commercial property

  • @ApexCypher_
    @ApexCypher_ Před 7 měsíci +37

    Taxes
    * Income Tax
    * Capital Gains Tax
    * National Insurance
    * VAT
    * Council Tax
    * Corporation Tax
    * Dividend Tax
    * Bank payroll Tax
    * Petroleum Revenue Tax
    * Fuel Duties
    * Vehicle Tax - VED
    * SORN - Vehicles parked off road
    * Vehicle Registration
    * Vehicle MOT
    * Inheritance Tax
    * Stamp Duty
    * Tobacco Duties
    * Spirits Duties
    * Beer Duties
    * Wines Duties
    * Cider Duties
    * Betting & Gaming Duties
    * Air Passenger Duty
    * Insurance Premium Tax
    * Landfill Tax
    * Climate Change Levy
    * Aggregates Tax
    * Congestion Charge
    * ULEZ
    Stealth Taxes
    * Income Tax Threshold Freezes
    * Personal Savings Interest Threshold
    * Lifetime Allowance on Pensions
    * Parking Fines
    * Speeding Fines
    * Box Junction Fines
    * LTN Fines
    * AI Cameras

    • @docgraal485
      @docgraal485 Před měsícem +1

      I’m 18 right now and I’m terrified

    • @SibylleHyde
      @SibylleHyde Před měsícem +2

      😂 you forgot gambling duty 😂

    • @ApexCypher_
      @ApexCypher_ Před měsícem +2

      @@SibylleHyde 🤣
      It’s number 22 on the list but thanks 🙏🏼 😀

    • @SibylleHyde
      @SibylleHyde Před měsícem +3

      Oops

    • @user-kq5qp6dh8l
      @user-kq5qp6dh8l Před měsícem

      And many more😵‍💫

  • @Squinge123456789
    @Squinge123456789 Před 8 měsíci +322

    I would argue that this tax system is one of the reasons we have low economic growth because it doesn’t encourage us to be productive. Why would anyone with lots of money invest in new factories and technologies when they can buy and sell assets, such as property, which will earn more money than working on something that improves the countries ability/productivity in producing something like a good or service?

    • @MrEdrftgyuji
      @MrEdrftgyuji Před 8 měsíci +46

      Not to mention, when you earn over £50k a year, you are considered to be "rich," and half of everything over that goes to the government.
      Meanwhile, buying a modest house in London would cost you £600k minimum.

    • @MarkSinnottIreland
      @MarkSinnottIreland Před 8 měsíci +27

      It demotivates work and actually encourages people to go on the dole.

    • @farmideas
      @farmideas Před 8 měsíci +11

      You have hit the mail on the head. Investing in production, through company shares has a level of risk which is far greater than teh risk involved in owning property. So house prices rise, benefiting existing owners, and companies find themselves borrowing at terms which are difficult to pay.

    • @A190xx
      @A190xx Před 7 měsíci +8

      Harry Lambert suggests we take money from those who have acquired more and give it to those have less. Who would work harder knowing they will have to hand it over to those that work less?

    • @philwells4341
      @philwells4341 Před 7 měsíci +21

      @@A190xx If I have interpreted your point correctly, it depends on how it's acquired and then depends on where it goes. If it's simply tax the rich more and then hand it out in 'out of work' benefits then i agree, it stops aspiration of those who strive as they climb into greater wealth. If you tax capital gains the same as you would income, then invest that into proper healthcare, education, transport and improving deprived areas then it creates more options for those less well off to become strivers themselves. The current tax situation perpetuates inequality of choice and options available. Society can't help those who won't help themselves, but it should at least provide help to those who choose to do so. I can't see the current system doing that and we need money to help them.

  • @RedC220
    @RedC220 Před 8 měsíci +382

    As a business owner I've reached a point where I now see little to no value in investing further in my own business. Any potential increase in returns is so punitively taxed that it's no longer attractive in any way shape or form. The bigger problem I see is there's no viable alternative to the shambles we currently have in power. We have two major political parties that are simply varying degrees of right with seemingly nothing new on offer. I'm in my 50's and I've never before reached a point where I don't feel there is a party who I feel inclined to support. I genuinely see no viable party right now.

    • @FlyingDarkLord
      @FlyingDarkLord Před 8 měsíci +9

      Agree 👍🏼

    • @PazLeBon
      @PazLeBon Před 8 měsíci +8

      nothing wrong with having a small business. everynoe nowadays wants to own the world ;)

    • @ReedoAce
      @ReedoAce Před 8 měsíci

      It’s a sell out country. Chaos/ civil turmoil shortly

    • @dddddbbb
      @dddddbbb Před 8 měsíci +23

      Do what other corporations do - take on lots of debt so you in theory have zero profits whilst paying yourself big dividends.

    • @StarMan_2018
      @StarMan_2018 Před 8 měsíci +33

      @@PazLeBonno not everyone wants to “own the world”. Not even the top 10% want to own the world. You only need an income of £60k to be in the top 10%. And the top 1% only earn £173k per year. Sounds a lot I know, and I wish that was me… but even that is not a tremendous amount of money.
      No it’s only about one or two dozen people in total who really want to “own the world”. Most people just want to own a decent home, have a nice car, go on holiday every year and be able to retire without worrying. The top 1% are still just small fry’s.

  • @madcapmikeymike4497
    @madcapmikeymike4497 Před 8 měsíci +183

    I love that these corrupt politicians are being found out by these intelligent people. People are finally awakening to these corrupt and illegal schemes that is being imposed on them.

    • @nyakwarObat
      @nyakwarObat Před 8 měsíci +7

      "Finally waking up", what have they been doing to date to just be waking up? Partying? Pathetic..🙄

    • @SergeyKamenezki
      @SergeyKamenezki Před 8 měsíci

      Sounds like bunch of populistic leftie propoganda.
      Wealth tax is what it is. You'll try to tax these people with higher taxes they'll move the money out and you'll get nothing. For them it's easier to move capital then for regular people.
      Many have tried and failed.
      There has to be another solution than take from rich give to the poor. Never worked and never will.

    • @Steveo5541
      @Steveo5541 Před 7 měsíci

      Great comment more and more citizens of the U.K. are understanding how deeply corrupt our politicians are. Slowly but surely more of the corruption will be exposed

    • @hoonaticbloggs5402
      @hoonaticbloggs5402 Před 7 měsíci

      @@nyakwarObat😂😂
      The tax scheme is as old as the hills.

    • @Worms_Pro
      @Worms_Pro Před 7 měsíci

      And politicians are all corrupt. All the decent people are killed and murdered.

  • @daljitsingh2143
    @daljitsingh2143 Před 7 měsíci +127

    You guys are men after my own heart. You've outlined how corrupt and unfair the tax system is in this country

    • @SB-dg8hq
      @SB-dg8hq Před 7 měsíci

      They are freeloaders that wants other people to pay their council tax.
      Council tax is for local services like schools, social care, rubbish collection and recycling, street lights, police, fire brigade etc etc,
      If you live in a community you should pay towards that community.
      Those young men have been getting handouts all their lives, now when it's time to put something back they are stretching their necks to find someone else to pay for them.
      How very typical of the entitlement generation.

    • @terryj50
      @terryj50 Před 5 měsíci +2

      The tax system is unfair when most people are on 16hr contracts they pay nothing in you need to get people working and paying in.

    • @dougharris4853
      @dougharris4853 Před 4 měsíci

      Correct and yet we need to reform the tax system. How do you start when it the system is set up to benefit the ultra rich

    • @markblance8492
      @markblance8492 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Everyone complains the tax system is unfair. The bigger injustice is taking our hard earned taxes and giving it away to those who don’t want to work. Britain has grown into a country of work shy, I want something for nothing sofa slugs.
      The rest of us work hard to keep them…. Get those who can work into work, then let’s have a debate on increased taxation. STOP over taxing those of us who do work….! to pay for those who choose not to work. STOP draining our social services to pay for the lazy.

  • @albertbrammer9263
    @albertbrammer9263 Před 8 měsíci +165

    Cut budget of prisons: more drugs and overfull prisons.
    Cut budget to rebuild schools: pupils cannot attend crumbling schools.
    Cut budgets to Councils: roads are terrible, councils going bust, poor social services, poor children's services.
    The list of years of cutting budgets is our country becoming crap.

    • @connclissmann6514
      @connclissmann6514 Před 8 měsíci +9

      The issue is where did the money flow? The video suggests just the asset rich got wealthier.

    • @lonyo5377
      @lonyo5377 Před 8 měsíci +12

      Legalise and tax cannabis. Less for police to deal with, and more tax income.
      Spend it all on renewable generation to reduce energy costs

    • @Etheoma
      @Etheoma Před 8 měsíci

      To be fair my person opinion is that if you are an adult you should be able to put whatever you want in your own body and we should be legalizing and taxing drugs because all drug criminalization does is create a revenue stream for criminals, costs police time and tax payer money locking people away, and I mean all drugs. This would need to come with labelling to be like this can cause X, Y and Z and for drugs that do cause aggression-which I would like to point out alcohol is worse than most illicit drugs when it comes to that-a special that this drug is known to cause excess aggressive tendencies and that if you commit a violent crime while under it's influence you will be subject to forced rehab and a longer jail sentence.
      This is not to actually stop people committing violent crimes while under the influence, it's cautionary so that people are less likely to take it in the first place and if they do they take precessions so they can't hurt anyone else before they take it.
      Also you would be taking a chunk of that tax money from the sale of drugs and putting it into rehabilitation clinics and public awareness of drugs and legalization has been shown to decrease the rate at which people take drugs, almost eliminate overdosing, cutting off a funding source for organized crime and the rest of the supply chain for the illicit production and distribution of illegal drugs and putting it in the hands of people above board which will bluster the economy.
      There is nothing but up sides for legalization as long as you enable good quality treatment for addiction.

    • @angelachanelhuang1651
      @angelachanelhuang1651 Před 8 měsíci

      HSBC is people's banks

    • @patmcgee3061
      @patmcgee3061 Před 8 měsíci +7

      My energy company sends me a bill which say that all of the energy I use is from 100% renewable sources, but it is no cheaper than anyone else’s.

  • @alexmeager233
    @alexmeager233 Před 8 měsíci +291

    It is has always amazed me that we tax actual work progressively at 20%, 40% and 45% but capitals gains tax is lower at 10% and 20% (18% and 28% for residential property). So you literally get taxed more for producing goods and services and contributing to the economy than being lucky enough to own assets and doing nothing to earn that the return on those assets.

    • @janeknight3597
      @janeknight3597 Před 8 měsíci +21

      And of course there is National insurance that stops at a certain level that never seems to be updated.

    • @NorthDownReader
      @NorthDownReader Před 8 měsíci +40

      "lucky enough to own assets and doing nothing to earn that the return on those assets."
      Because CGT is not indexed against inflation you can be taxed for making a loss on those assets in real terms.

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 Před 8 měsíci +27

      When you include NI the real tax rates are 32%,42%.

    • @parametr
      @parametr Před 8 měsíci +20

      @@NorthDownReader income is not indexed against inflation either.
      CGT is lower because rich people run the country.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Gordon Brown changed the system.
      Blue Labour.

  • @CaptCanuck4444
    @CaptCanuck4444 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Young people like this give me hope for the future. Unfortunately, Britain has been governed for far too long by rich men born into generational wealth, intent on preserving their privilege. Taxing wealth is the solution to a better society, if only someone in power has the courage to do it.

  • @ryanwilliams989
    @ryanwilliams989 Před 6 měsíci +301

    The utilization of after-tax money and tax-free growth makes opening a Roth IRA very advantageous. Through a careful guidance of my FA, I did not pay taxes on my withdrawals of $2.86 million when I retired.

    • @TheresaAnderson-kf5xw
      @TheresaAnderson-kf5xw Před 6 měsíci +2

      I don't regret the numerous financial mistakes I've made in the past since I've learnt from them. But the biggest one was planning my finances without consulting with a licensed financial counsel.

    • @maryHenokNft
      @maryHenokNft Před 6 měsíci +4

      Indeed, I did make use of a financial counselor. As I get closer to retirement, their advice has been really helpful. I thought compound interest on index funds wouldn't be sufficient because I started late. It's amusing how I've done better than colleagues who have more years of investment experience. I've profited more than $886k tax free.

    • @maggysterling33254
      @maggysterling33254 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@maryHenokNft Please who is the consultant that assists you with your investment and if you don't mind, how do I get in touch with them?

    • @StellaMaris-lv2uq
      @StellaMaris-lv2uq Před 6 měsíci +1

      Thanks for the advice. The search for your coach was simple. I investigated her well before using her services. Considering her résumé, she appears competent.

    • @portaltaker
      @portaltaker Před 3 měsíci +23

      Shut up bot

  • @andrewcrawford1003
    @andrewcrawford1003 Před 8 měsíci +196

    The UK tax code should be a compulsory topic in state school curriculums. Tory politicians are practiced, professional (many are lawyers) liars. Teach students about the facts of the economic environment and their welfare so they can recognise a liar or a grifter when they see and hear them, and vote accordingly.

    • @Boghopper1979
      @Boghopper1979 Před 8 měsíci +3

      What's with the hatred of lawyers? All they do is try to make sure their clients are treated impartially in line with the laws of the land. Property lawyers, family lawyers, public defence defence lawyers....

    • @angelachanelhuang1651
      @angelachanelhuang1651 Před 8 měsíci +1

      cool

    • @bobnob4393
      @bobnob4393 Před 8 měsíci +13

      It's very obvious why they don't do this. Educating people about taxes would do nothing to maintain the status quo

    • @WhichDoctor1
      @WhichDoctor1 Před 8 měsíci

      That’s why Labour are ruling it out. They aren’t thinking about how to appeal to the public, they are desperately scared of turning the wealthy people who run our media and fund our politics against them. starmar is trying to sound amorphously progressive while not actually threatening the wealth and power of the people who make fortunes and gain ever more influence from the system as it’s currently run

    • @steveporritt1550
      @steveporritt1550 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Just teaching them where money is created would be a good start, practically no one understands Fractional Reserve Banking. How inflation is a stealth tax and the basics of the Austrian school of economics should also be on the curriculum.

  • @aanchaallllllll
    @aanchaallllllll Před 8 měsíci +293

    0:23: 📰 The tax code in Britain is heavily skewed in favor of wealth over work, landlords over tenants, and richer homeowners over poorer ones, with almost all inherited capital being passed on untaxed.
    2:45: 💰 The speaker proposes various reforms that could raise significant sums of money, such as using property tax to fund local services.
    5:46: 📊 The video discusses the difference in tax rates between income and capital gains, using Rishi Sunak as an example.
    8:46: 💰 The value of privately held assets in the UK has doubled since Tony Blair came into power relative to GDP, indicating a significant increase in wealth inequality.
    11:29: 🗣 The speaker discusses the difference between nominal and real spending, the challenges of cutting public services, and the impact of Tony Blair on the Labour Party.
    13:56: 📊 The British public is more conservative on tax policy and social issues than politicians realize.
    17:08: 🤔 The speaker discusses the tough decisions that need to be made in politics, including the child benefit cap and tax burdens.
    Recap by Tammy AI

    • @ambition112
      @ambition112 Před 8 měsíci +3

      Thanks for sharing it! Saving my time with useful time stamps! where you get this AI summary tool Tammy AI??

    • @aldozilli1293
      @aldozilli1293 Před 8 měsíci +12

      The mega rich are the issue, the top 1% not the others making decent income with small limited companies yet these are the ones who get hit most and pay in the most tax relatively.

    • @nicktecky55
      @nicktecky55 Před 8 měsíci +5

      "...almost all inherited capital being passed on untaxed." Classic Tricky Dicky BS we expect from Labour.
      Will it be policy to remove the family home provisions? After all, we can't have all those modest 3 bed semis being passed on, can we? They are usually below the threshold now. That's "untaxed inherited capital" after all. Labour has always detested the aspirational working class, so are they going to stick to type?
      With 75% of the land stolen from the English people 1000 years ago still in the hands of the descendants, surely it is way beyond time to rectify this injustice? No need to be punitive, just take the estates into public ownership without compensation as 'reparations' for the misdeeds of the past. Hell will freeze over first, even Benn wasn't allowed to mention it.
      Widow's pensions? After all, they are funded from "inherited capital" aren't they?
      Grandstanding? Smokescreening? Choose to suit.
      The country is now governed by an avowed Thatcherite, and the prospective Labour PM is an avowed Blairite, and has stuffed his future cabinet with ditto clones.
      Nothing at all will change that favours working people.
      I wonder what Penny Mordant's policies will be? The next five years are a write off already.

    • @elinys2843
      @elinys2843 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@Michael-ur3on the rich don’t own the majority of their wealth in person, there’s funds and firms that own their real estate, their art works, their investments, … , so their children won’t be taxed on all of the wealth. Your mums complete capital/wealth was hers, so you pay 40% on all of it.

    • @raymonddonaghy2314
      @raymonddonaghy2314 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Inheritance tax should of never been allowed totally illegal

  • @anna_kendrick
    @anna_kendrick Před 6 měsíci +28

    Some economists have projected that both the U.S. and parts of Europe could slip into a recession for a portion of 2023. A global recession, defined as a contraction in annual global per capita income, is more rare because China and emerging markets often grow faster than more developed economies. Essentially the world economy is considered to be in recession if economic growth falls behind population growth...

    • @crystaljune473
      @crystaljune473 Před 6 měsíci

      Emotionally-charged decisions to sell off large quantities of stocks or other investments now lock in your losses, removing any chance for future growth.

    • @fisayofosudo538
      @fisayofosudo538 Před 6 měsíci

      A 2022 Northwestern Mutual study found that 75% of U.S. adults admit their financial planning needs improvement. However, only 29% of Americans work with a financial advisor.

    • @Jessrobbie
      @Jessrobbie Před 6 měsíci

      Very correct; the bear market has contributed significantly to the growth of my investment. I was able to quickly increase my portfolio from $180K to $472K. Essentially, I was just doing as my financial advisor instructed. You're good to go as long as you get competent assistance.

    • @devoncampbell275
      @devoncampbell275 Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@@JessrobbieWould it be okay if I asked you to recommend this specific advisor or company that you used their services? Seems you've figured it all out.

    • @Jessrobbie
      @Jessrobbie Před 6 měsíci +1

      ​@devoncampbell275:
      I personally have my portfolio overseen by California-based wealth advisor and fixed income strategist at that
      'Britney Cohen Rose > Pro' well established and you'd find her professional bio on the net. However I suggHowever look closer to home, sometimes to move certain amount of money I am required to be in California.

  • @user-qn2un8tj4t
    @user-qn2un8tj4t Před 8 měsíci +18

    We need more of these people in politics

  • @deanroberts2021
    @deanroberts2021 Před 8 měsíci +22

    Would agree , I earn about £1300 after tax per month my council tax is £1260 per year.
    Its a big chunk of my already taxed pay.

    • @kinggeoffrey3801
      @kinggeoffrey3801 Před 8 měsíci

      Blame Thatcher. She brought in the council tax to stop us average folk having too much power.
      In the 80s, too many people were becoming mortgage free before they reached 40. They all had numerous properties as an extra income stream.
      30 plus years later, most people will die with a mortgage. Her plan worked a treat.

    • @nataliam9764
      @nataliam9764 Před 8 měsíci +5

      In Italy, I was paying €45 per year on council tax.

    • @truthhasnofeelings5245
      @truthhasnofeelings5245 Před 8 měsíci

      Don’t forget all the other taxes we pay as well, how did the previous generations allow this.. they have allowed this take over and now we are finished.

    • @tomjones8715
      @tomjones8715 Před měsícem

      Ever asked your self where that goes?

  • @harrystraw9975
    @harrystraw9975 Před 8 měsíci +379

    This is an amazing conversation between two intelligent, articulate, and engaging young men. I was interested from start to finish. We need more people voicing sensible, reasonable and forward-thinking ideas such as this. Is it not too late to get these guys into politics? Thank you NS for this sort of content. You’ve got a new subscriber.

    • @NewStatesman
      @NewStatesman  Před 8 měsíci +13

      Thanks, and welcome!

    • @JB_inks
      @JB_inks Před 8 měsíci +8

      ​@@NewStatesmanagreed, well done everyone involved

    • @valuetraveler2026
      @valuetraveler2026 Před 8 měsíci +3

      future is looking good but it will take a while...maybe another ten years or so

    • @PazLeBon
      @PazLeBon Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@valuetraveler2026 ive heard that for 5 decades almost lol, the only one with a actual feelgood factor for most people were in the 90s

    • @evolassunglasses4673
      @evolassunglasses4673 Před 8 měsíci

      But Globalisation destroyed the nation state democracy decades ago unfortunately.

  • @holdupmaster
    @holdupmaster Před 8 měsíci +9

    keep in mind that you can't 'spend' the value of your house, council tax is paid from earned (and taxed) income. This creates a problem seen in the US, where homeowners house value ends up taxing them out of the ownership of their home.

  • @philipstrong8220
    @philipstrong8220 Před 8 měsíci +7

    A breath of fresh air. Some clear thinking and a willingness to discuss the deep rooted issues driving inequality in Britain ... and propose solutions.

  • @factstrumpprejudice6740
    @factstrumpprejudice6740 Před 8 měsíci +153

    I was born towards the end of WW11, spent some years teaching the tax system for the old Workers Education Association. I would simply write a few examples of earnings on the black board and apply the tax system to the numbers. The title of my class ... If folks knew how the taxation system works, there would be a revolution. So no change here then.

    • @judeirwin2222
      @judeirwin2222 Před 8 měsíci +51

      World War eleven?? God, I must have been asleep longer than I’d intended!

    • @Boghopper1979
      @Boghopper1979 Před 8 měsíci +34

      ​@@judeirwin2222Lucky you missed 4 but 8 was a corker!

    • @w1swh1
      @w1swh1 Před 8 měsíci +13

      I remember my father complaining, when I was 5 years old, about austerity and how "we all have to tighten our belts". I am now 76! Yes nothing changes.

    • @jusw
      @jusw Před 8 měsíci +6

      Should we hope he is a terminator sent from the future to destroy the burgeoning AI industry...?

    • @factstrumpprejudice6740
      @factstrumpprejudice6740 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@jusw I laughed.

  • @zeez202
    @zeez202 Před 8 měsíci +101

    Thanks for bringing light to this. I was astonished that Labour didn’t make any noise about this when Starmer and Sunak were made to publish their tax returns.

    • @shabbydabbydo314
      @shabbydabbydo314 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Of course, with members leaving Labour -where do you think labours record funding is coming from?

    • @bahriboy
      @bahriboy Před 8 měsíci

      I'm not surprised. There's a reason Labour HQ was always anti Corbyn.

    • @M896
      @M896 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@shabbydabbydo314 That sentence doesn't even make sense

    • @shabbydabbydo314
      @shabbydabbydo314 Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@M896 think about it...

    • @carvoloco4229
      @carvoloco4229 Před 8 měsíci +5

      No, really, it doesn't. Try writing it again, please.

  • @Doggaz72
    @Doggaz72 Před 8 měsíci +14

    Fantastic discussion! This is why I’m all for bringing in and allowing young minds to thrive.

  • @Barbara0015
    @Barbara0015 Před 6 měsíci +260

    I think we are too obsessed about the economy crashing. In the right sense, the economy never crashes. It just undergoes cycles, and almost always recovers. So I really don't care what the predictions are. I just want to grow my investment portfolio. I read that lots of folks are making multi-figures as incomes despite the downturn. Any tips on how to make substantial progress in earning?

    • @linsey.
      @linsey. Před 6 měsíci +1

      Nobody knows anything! You need to create your own process, manage risk and stick to the plan, through thick or thin, while also continuously learning from mistakes and improving.

    • @Agatha207
      @Agatha207 Před 6 měsíci

      But the professionals are still crushing it right now because they have both the necessary approach to pull off a profit in the market plus access to insider market knowledge that isn’t made public.

    • @Hoffmanluiz.
      @Hoffmanluiz. Před 6 měsíci

      Exactly why i enjoy market decisions being guided by a professional, seeing that their entire skillset is built around going long and short at the same time both employing risk management and market experience, been using the expertise and guidance of John Desmond Heppolette, for over 5years+ and I've netted over $3million in that time frame..

    • @Campbell957
      @Campbell957 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I've shuffled through a few financial advisor in the past, but settled with John Desmond Heppolette. The strategy he use is recession-proof, more specifically profit-oriented, and most likely, you'd find his basic info on the net, he's a renowned advisor.

    • @Barbara0015
      @Barbara0015 Před 6 měsíci

      Thanks for the information! I just discovered his exceptional resume when I made a research of his full names online. He appears knowledgeable and well accredited. I drop him a message and book a call session with him!

  • @BIBIWCICC
    @BIBIWCICC Před 8 měsíci +15

    The government could turn around the country overnight by shutting down the offshore tax evasion and money laundering system. If the government recovered this revenue it would fund the NHS five times over every year and lower the retirement age to fifty or double the state pension. Incredible figures!

    • @yoshua9676
      @yoshua9676 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The rich will just leave.

  • @arthurdixon5890
    @arthurdixon5890 Před 8 měsíci +82

    As a 73 year old person who works full time and draws some pensions I pay more tax than Rishi. Wow!!!

  • @francishead8939
    @francishead8939 Před 7 měsíci +5

    Couple genuine questions on the council tax points. 1) won’t linking council tax to the owner rather than the occupier just result in increased rent and difficulty assigning discounts for students and single occupants? 2) if done on a % of home value how would the home value be calculated and how often would it be recalculated?

  • @tz6414
    @tz6414 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Unfair taxes for me are
    1. Inheritance tax, my father worked hard all his life, lived a meagre existence hence built up some savings to have a good part of it taken away by IHT. He has already paid tax on his earnings, but a double whammy to have it taxed again.
    2. Tax on interest on savings previously taxed.
    The country is in dire straights financially due to covid, green policies and the fact that 50% of the population are net drains , not contributors to the country. I don't see an easy answer, taxes are unfair undesirable but a necessity.

  • @jimschachtschneider7741
    @jimschachtschneider7741 Před 8 měsíci +83

    Tax rates are generally geared towards protecting the wealthy. Some things never change.

  • @gedog77
    @gedog77 Před 8 měsíci +45

    As a middle aged man who has lived through a boom and bust recession, credit crunch and austerity I’ve seen our public sector whittled away and our core services hollowed out. I’ve seen the asset-rich buy their way into a different reality, with private schools and private hospitals. The interests of the country are best served with levelling up and I’d like to see an increase in economic equality. Unearned and unequal wealth should be taxed in a meaningful way.

  • @ATradersLifePodcast
    @ATradersLifePodcast Před 3 měsíci +1

    Excellent interview. Refreshing to have two young guys calmly point out the injustices of the UK tax system without resorting to accusatory or emotive language. We need calm heads, analytical minds to get us out of this mess.

  • @christopher554
    @christopher554 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Freezing tax thresholds is a tax on the poor ,they should be ashamed

  • @kenderareawesome
    @kenderareawesome Před 8 měsíci +24

    I don't think enough is also understood as to why its a bad idea for the richest part of society to have so much money. It reduces a persons opportunity in their own career to be dropped into a world of the rich. Sure they are happy to let you work as a bartender, a cleaner or an office job but a lot of the higher paying/prestigious jobs are ring fenced for the friends and children of the wealthy.

    • @markblance8492
      @markblance8492 Před 2 měsíci

      Ring fenced jobs for the rich….! Do you know how industry works?
      I would suggest, higher roles are only available to them because they were afforded private education and a position in the top universities (similar to the two presenters). No business can afford to employ an under-performer, it simply does not happen. However I agree, if you are lucky enough to be afforded a private education and position in a top University, you stand a higher chance of being successful and securing a top job.
      This is the only privilege the wealthy have…… and is a product of an our failing education system and ridiculous university costs. Scrap university fees for British people and more have the opportunity of higher paid jobs.

  • @colinthompson3111
    @colinthompson3111 Před 8 měsíci +110

    Canadian fan of the program. This was one of the best videos NS has done for youtube. Mr. Lambert took the audience through the major taxation ideas for their consideration at the next election. No other UK media outlet has done the job he did. Interviewer asked great questions. On all the other media channels, focus is often placed on comparison of UK to G7 or EU financial results. That would be the only minor criticism I have of this interview.

    • @tsubadaikhan6332
      @tsubadaikhan6332 Před 8 měsíci +10

      I'm Australian, and agree completely. This is a conversation that needs to happen in all countries with ageing populations, growing wealth inequality, and unattainable housing expenses.

    • @sumitmadan768
      @sumitmadan768 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Agree as well as a Canadian living for the last year in London and seeing so many similarities on how inequality is getting intitutionalised.

  • @Alan_Duval
    @Alan_Duval Před 7 měsíci +11

    My only concern with the normalizing of Council Tax to 0.5% is that you'd end up with the same problems as the American schooling system. If the Council halves the tax rate but is a higher-need area, then the area will suffer with a reduced tax take. I assume, therefore, that such a proposal would involve some kind of re-balancing of incomes across councils. It might have been useful to elaborate on that a bit more.

    • @whatacruelchoice
      @whatacruelchoice Před 5 měsíci

      Rebalancing council rates would have a lot of effects. Wages can be lower if rates are lower. There could be more disparity in purchases power between authorities than there already is. Property values are also very dynamic change the upkeep costs substantially and prices will fly off in unpredictable directions.

    • @Mac10213
      @Mac10213 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Completely agree. Avg house price in Burnley is 133k. .5% is around £600 p/a. London’s average is £750k, so .5% is £3750.
      If London are paying 6x the same CT, how can Burnley expect the same standard of services.

    • @Pes60
      @Pes60 Před 2 měsíci

      Landowners would just put the rent up to cover them paying council tax if they had to pay it.

    • @meljen8592
      @meljen8592 Před 2 měsíci

      If you follow the American economy,the old adage of they sneeze,we catch a cold,is very pertinent,American property taxes are out of control,uk council tax,potentially rising too unaffordable levels.

  • @DonLoganfan
    @DonLoganfan Před 8 měsíci +12

    Fantastic conversation. All the points discussed chimed with me. We must tax the wealth and asset class to redistribute more fairly. This will restart economic growth. You have a new subscriber

  • @Infundibular
    @Infundibular Před 8 měsíci +118

    I'm not always blown away by New Statesman's coverage but credit to them for doing this. I am sick to death of Labour's completely nonsensical approach to the economy going uncritiqued or somehow accepted as 'grown-up politics'. Their approach is completely inadequate for dealing with the inequality that now exists.

    • @sjewitt22
      @sjewitt22 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Ns went against labour when they promoted policies they now talk about.

    • @mhtbfecsq1
      @mhtbfecsq1 Před 8 měsíci

      What's the Tories approach? Crash the economy and lose 100's of billions a year through cronyism /corruption, Brexit & political skulduggery and general managed decline of the pillars of society which are inextricably linked to the performance of the economy, then bully and steal from the poor to give to the mega wealthy who have more money than they know what to do with and through their spending patterns drive up asset prices while being taxed less than someone on 37k.

    • @spectre750
      @spectre750 Před 8 měsíci

      Because there is not Tory or Labour any more. They are all part of the globalist uni-party following the WEF mantra of UN agenda 2030.

    • @wolfen210959
      @wolfen210959 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Aye, the Tories have done a much better job than Labour, and will continue to do so, in the run-up to winning the next GE. /s

    • @mhtbfecsq1
      @mhtbfecsq1 Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@wolfen210959 Yea good one. You probably believe Jimmy Savile cared about young people too right?

  • @ricequackers
    @ricequackers Před 8 měsíci +15

    The tax system of Britain seems to be carefully calibrated to screw over precisely the middle classes responsible for the majority of the country's economic output, seemingly to stop them getting ideas above their station and joining the ranks of the elites by becoming properly wealthy while obfuscating its unfairness (not many people realise the income tax system has a peak marginal rate of 60%, higher than even the Scandi countries. You can thank Alastair Darling for that and the Tories for hanging on to it). My own income tax/NI burden comes out around 40%, once you start adding in the myriad stealth taxes it's more like 50% or possibly more of my earnings ending up in Treasury coffers to fund...something.
    Unfortunately, Mr Lambert puts a little too much faith in Labour to rebalance things. I won't be surprised if they wind up imposing a new wealth tax on the wealthy (who can quickly escape the country) while simultaneously increasing income taxes to screw over the middle class (who can't leave so easily) even more, all to fund...something.

    • @Garcia061
      @Garcia061 Před 8 měsíci

      Absolutely

    • @vairagya108
      @vairagya108 Před 7 měsíci

      great comment

    • @Alaron251
      @Alaron251 Před 7 měsíci

      100%. Because the ultimate goal of western elites is the stratification of us, and them. There will be no economic ladder. Simply the sewers and the ivory towers. No in between.

  • @andyrobinson7071
    @andyrobinson7071 Před 7 měsíci +1

    An extremely engaging conversation, very well presented by two gentlemen who clearly have a grasp of the tax system. Have they put there ideas to the incoming government? You have men gentlemen as a new subscriber, thank you.

  • @philhill3359
    @philhill3359 Před 8 měsíci +28

    Some interesting ideas. However, there are always reactions and responses to changes in tax policy. For instance moving the responsibility for council tax from the tenant to the landlord will simply see rental costs increase for the tenant and no extra tax. The idea of equalising council tax based on property prices makes complete sense (I thought that was the original intention of the tax? I maybe wrong), but would need to be accompanied by changes in central govt funding for councils.
    In principle, I agree with increasing wealth taxes, but it's worth pointing out that the UK already raises twice as much tax on property than the OECD average (UK 12%, OECD avg. 6%). So, a realignment, as suggested in the video, should be the focus. The other thing to point out is that the main reason, I believe, that gov'ts avoid increasing tax on wealth is because of the fear around capital flight. The UK is so reliant on private, mainly foreign investment (due to 50+ years of govt neglect, waste, and selling off of our national assets), that changes in this area would need to consider the reactions of private investors. I don't like it, but I believe this is where we are.

    • @Ttdogi
      @Ttdogi Před 2 měsíci

      The higher the rent, the more valuable the property, the more it pays in tax. Simple raising rent makes it less profitable and property is forced to be less valuable.
      Your point is null, georgism ftw

  • @paulcowham2095
    @paulcowham2095 Před 8 měsíci +41

    I completely agree that the taxation system needs to change as Harry explains, but also the loopholes that enable the super rich to move their assets offshore need to be addressed. Also, wealth inequality has increased since the early 80's (neoliberalism). I think that there is a real appetite for change e.g. public ownership of national infrastructure seems to becoming more popular. Water companies pumping sewage into our rivers whilst paying huge dividends, or train companies subsidised by the tax payer running a mediocre service whilst paying billions to shareholders make no sense.

    • @michaeloconnor9465
      @michaeloconnor9465 Před 8 měsíci +6

      I do despair when people moan about dividend payments to share holders. People have to remember that pension funds fund pension payments via dividend payments. Anybody who has a pension private or workplace is an indirect shareholder's and receives dividend payments indirectly via the value of their pension. What should be taught in school is how to buy shares and create a passive income. School does not teach how money works and how to create wealth. I am sure it would catch the imagination of many kids who under achieve, who see no way but to stay poor working in most jobs. Their ambition becomes to join a gang and make easy money selling drugs. The wealthy do not want the state educated children to understand how money works. They want to keep that privilege for their own children. I talk to many people about share ownership and building a passive income. Their answer is that you understand that, I don't. The reason they don't understand share ownership is because they were never taught how money works in school. They learn how to get a credit card but are not taught how to use and manage credit cards and how to make credit work for them. I hardly buy everything outright with my capital, I use interest-free credit to pay for nearly everything and then use my capital to work for me. Share ownership is not about a quick buck but a long term investments to build dividend payments for later in life and achieve financial security.

    • @ernestthesmallholder559
      @ernestthesmallholder559 Před 8 měsíci

      @@michaeloconnor9465 I agree, Knowledge of the advantages of share ownership (which is true public ownership) is hard to come by in state schools and it is only when you get to university that you meet people who can help. I suggest people contact the share foundation (Gavin Oldham) who can help.

    • @PrinceBarin77
      @PrinceBarin77 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Can you elaborate on the loopholes you describe? Curious to know, if you were moving abroad (either to retire or for a job opportunity), would you be happy to have the value of your assets (including savings and house sale proceeds) taxed on exit?

    • @therealrobertbirchall
      @therealrobertbirchall Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​@michaeloconnor9465 one man's passive income is another man's enslavement

    • @3DJay429
      @3DJay429 Před 8 měsíci

      The wealthy should have the freedom to move their assets offshore, as those assets belong to them. In a world that values freedom, individuals should have the right to relocate if their current residence doesn't align with their beliefs.

  • @Ghefly
    @Ghefly Před 7 měsíci

    Great conversation. I've read a few New Statesman pieces in the past but this video persuaded me to subscribe.

  • @eminem2
    @eminem2 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I pay 55% overall, due to higher rate tax, NI, student loans. Granted, I am on a good salary. But I still have to pay £10k+ to bring my wife in the UK and we get no adequate healthcare for the tax we pay, plus she's entitled to 0 public funds if we get hit by a bus. Absolute shame.

    • @thatwhit1
      @thatwhit1 Před 5 měsíci

      Where did you purchase your wife from?

  • @photosbyernesto9621
    @photosbyernesto9621 Před 8 měsíci +45

    Great piece! Unfortunately, many politicians on both sides of the fence are part of the "asset class" and consequently, they don't want to implement real change to taxation on assets. It's the same here in Australia, where the ALP merely tinkers at the periphery, but won't really hit the upper end of asset holders as hard as they should.

  • @IAMShteve
    @IAMShteve Před 8 měsíci +78

    It's an interesting idea, but I see a couple of flaws:
    1. If councils in poorer areas are currently effectively charging 1.5% of a house's value for council tax, and London is charging about 0.1%, surely if you change it to 0.5%, poorer councils now have less money and London has even more. Doesn't feel like levelling up much.
    2. You assume that an increase in the value of an asset equals an increase in the amount of money the owner has. I bought my house for £90k in 2000, it's now worth £300k. I earn less now than I did then. The increase in value of my house only exists when I sell it, and then I need to buy somewhere else to live. Somewhere else that has also increased in cost. The money doesn't exist.

    • @Bussellification
      @Bussellification Před 8 měsíci +15

      I'd probably propose councils sharing out the council tax raised around the country, so richer councils get the same as they do now and poor councils receive a 'subsidy' as such.
      When a property is your main residence you don't pay capital gains on it when its sold if you buy another place. You only pay stamp duty on the new property being bought. It would affect wealthy buying a selling property that isn't main residence and also their shares in stocks or any other asset they sell at a profit.

    • @user-vm7eg3jc4e
      @user-vm7eg3jc4e Před 8 měsíci +12

      Councils don't receive the money that is raised in their area from council tax. Council tax goes to the UK central government who then give a proportion back out to local councils which isn't necessarily reflective of the council tax base.

    • @seanb9530
      @seanb9530 Před 8 měsíci +8

      This is cr#p!
      You seem to miss the fact that people have quite often paid income tax to create their wealth.
      If investments have made a capital gain they have taken the investment risk to achieve that gain.
      We all have access to the same services regardless of the value of our house.
      The main problem in the UK is too many on benefits that shouldn't be.

    • @buzudbuzu
      @buzudbuzu Před 8 měsíci +9

      On paper all ideas are brilliant, when you come to implement them, most are not viable.
      Ok you remove the renters from paying the council tax - What will the landlord do? Pass it over to the tenant, meaning rent increase.
      Just like Business rates (from ANY business) are passed over to consumers.

    • @IAMShteve
      @IAMShteve Před 8 měsíci

      @@user-vm7eg3jc4e Have you got anything to back that up? If it's true, why do councils try to increase their local council tax to make up for funding shortfalls?

  • @gameaccount1612
    @gameaccount1612 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Where did you get the 0.1% in London figure ?
    My understanding is that council tax is based on bands, number of occupants and the estimated propery value from April 1991 by VOA.
    For instance, a 250-500k(current) house in London, if both are in band D with 1 occupant is around £1.3k per year, and the owner has to pay it even if you rent it.

  • @barryodwyer2367
    @barryodwyer2367 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Brilliant. This should be shown to schools, colleges and Universities so that those entering the real world can understand how the tax game is currently played.

  • @normanchristie4524
    @normanchristie4524 Před 8 měsíci +29

    Until we have a transparent system our economy will never thrive. I am getting old, I can still remember Lady Docker flaunting her gold- plated Rolls Royce. This has been going on since the early 1950s. None of this would be reinvested in industry, instead swept off to off-shore tax havens. Grossly unfair to employees who generated this wealth.

    • @buzzukfiftythree
      @buzzukfiftythree Před 8 měsíci +2

      You forgot to mention her private yacht. It’s been going on much further back than the 1950s and much of the wealth that built so many of our 18th and early 19th Century National Trust properties and private stately homes was derived from income from the slave trade (e.g. Capesthorne Hall in Cheshire).

    • @StarMan_2018
      @StarMan_2018 Před 8 měsíci

      Employees don’t generate wealth. CUSTOMERS do.

  • @MrSmith_
    @MrSmith_ Před 8 měsíci

    Summed up perfectly. The rules of the game has been fixed. This was such an interesting take. Enjoyed it thoroughly.

  • @thomasfraser3622
    @thomasfraser3622 Před 3 měsíci

    Superb piece. Well presented at a level which is accessible to all. Very informative giving well argued alternatives to current policies.

  • @MrAvant123
    @MrAvant123 Před 8 měsíci +7

    The UK tax system just encourages evasion !

    • @gitgudgaming506
      @gitgudgaming506 Před 8 měsíci +1

      All tax systems encourage you to use the law to your advantage. Tax system aims to encourage economic activity. The average working person can reduce the tax they pay by paying into their pension more, investing into S&S ISA that is free from tax, and there are lots of ways to reduce your tax burden legally as a ltd company. The average person can do all these things.

    • @skrich9690
      @skrich9690 Před 8 měsíci

      Especially by those people who preside over it.

  • @janpetersen7440
    @janpetersen7440 Před 8 měsíci +34

    With the English political duopoly system (Labour vs Conservative) it is virtually impossible to change the status quo. It requires a system with many different political parties, each of which has a main topic on the program (e.g. tax). And where the 'tax party' in a coalition government can get its policy through. Other parties with other topics on the program can get their policy through. This is how a society changes for the better. 😉

    • @richardhorton25
      @richardhorton25 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Your solution shows that PR is a pre-requisite - we can only hope that reform of the Lords with a PR elected second assembly takes away the fear of change for the governing assembly

    • @mandrakejake
      @mandrakejake Před 8 měsíci

      We need individual representation.
      We have the technology..

    • @johntowers1213
      @johntowers1213 Před 8 měsíci

      Does it work though? a brief look at some of the multi party setups around the world shows lots of governments that simply cant get anything done due to lack of consensus or when they do reach major decisions its often done at the price of bold change where interest groups use their bargaining power to water down or change the policy or program to their own benefit not necessarily to the betterment of those its meant to serve..
      I don't disagree that what we have now is a catastrophic mess for a whole host of reasons, but one thing a single party majority can get you is decisive action, where the issue then becomes putting the right people in power that align with the actual needs and wants of the populous, something we've soundly failed at for decades.
      TL/DR Coalition rule can help stop policy's you don't want being rammed through, but it does so at the cost of holding back policy that you do want to see come to pass in a timely fashion...

    • @PazLeBon
      @PazLeBon Před 8 měsíci

      @@richardhorton25 can you imagine the peoplewho get voted in tho? they be love island contenstants :/

    • @wolfen210959
      @wolfen210959 Před 8 měsíci

      Sadly, that would require a better form of democracy than currently exists, anywhere in the world. Most countries of the world have a duopoly system, even if it was not intended to be, simply because most people in the democracy are "centrists", therefore most political parties straddle that "centrist" line, with occasional periods of extremes. This inevitably leads to a left of centre party, and a right of centre party, with additional minority parties usually campaigning on a single issue, such as the Green Party here in the UK. The main difference here in the UK is that we only have one party on the right, and many parties on the left, therefore the right leaning party tends to win more elections, as the left leaning parties are contesting with each other for their share of the vote. I understand that there are countries which have a PR type system, but most of those are still dominated by one of two parties opposed to each other.

  • @euc131
    @euc131 Před 8 měsíci +14

    Very well explained ... ultimately the rich are the people who write the tax laws...

  • @user-tr6gb4pi9n
    @user-tr6gb4pi9n Před 7 měsíci

    ...such a helpful, illuminative and timely contribution ! I was aware of many of the structural inequities in our country and this has helped me towards a more comprehensive fiscal understanding. Thank you ! I don't want to be nihilistic but sadly as you guys indicate our political class, leadership (or lack of it) and I would add system, with over 780 mostly very wealthy peers and an ideologically driven doctrinaire, risk averse opposition party (using same gov. talking points eg 'the NHS needs reform' blah blah blah), the status-quo looks pretty 'baked in' and the next election looks unlikely to bring about any significant material change to wealth distribution and real terms repair & investment in our public services ? 🤷‍♂

  • @levantos
    @levantos Před 8 měsíci +14

    As long it's fair for both sides poor and rich. Having capital gains tax almost half the percentage of income tax is a great example of the system being fundamentally broken.

    • @PazLeBon
      @PazLeBon Před 8 měsíci +1

      why should it be fair to rich folk? if i take half a multi millioniars money is he poor? ;)

  • @eamonnmoroney5963
    @eamonnmoroney5963 Před 8 měsíci +8

    As someone who works in the tax industry and used to journalists butchering details, I was pleasantly surprised by this. I think an important part to mention is that when they talk about council tax and CGT etc. they need to clarify that it is about the effective rate in relation the value of their home/gain rather than that the wealthy are paying less (although in some cases I’m sure they are). I might be biased as an Irishman but I think the UK could learn a bit from the Irish tax system, where although there are high income taxes, we at least have a CGT rate of 33% which cuts in very quickly. We also have a gift tax as well as an inheritance tax which drastically increases the amount of IHT that is paid. There are annual allowances (which should by right be bigger) and lifetime allowances. The gift/inheritance tax rate is 33%, not 40%. In addition to help family business and farmers pass things to the next generation there is a 90% deduction to the value of gifts. I think it would level the playing field a small bit.

  • @That.pony.poppy.and.poppy123

    Fantastic! Well put together and professional with facts in abundance. 👍🏻

  • @lifeofdiggy6490
    @lifeofdiggy6490 Před 7 měsíci +1

    If I had one policy I could implement into the uk tomorrow it would be that NOBODY is allowed to own more than 2 houses. This whole thing boils down to greed, and the unfair nature is why the economy and young people are so destroyed in modern society.

  • @matt9017
    @matt9017 Před 8 měsíci +15

    Here is why I’m against any new taxes despite not being wealthy. It ALWAYS starts off as a tax on the ‘rich’ yet years later ends up as a tax on the average person. Show me one example where this is not the case.

    • @antonymossop3135
      @antonymossop3135 Před 8 měsíci +2

      If the "average person" makes substantial income from their invested wealth, then I don't see a problem with that. It's a capital gains tax, it should apply equally. It's just that it shouldn't be taxed less than working for a living. Tax income as income.

    • @coloaten6682
      @coloaten6682 Před 8 měsíci

      Nobody is talking about new taxes, it's about changing the rates for existing taxes so that the wealthy pay more. There has been an asset boom over that last few years and much of the wealth has gone to people with assets from people who work.

    • @paulmessenger9836
      @paulmessenger9836 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Stop your government giving your taxes away to other countries and involving the country in war overseas then talk about increasing taxes

    • @axelfiraxa
      @axelfiraxa Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@antonymossop3135 yes and no.
      If you have a salary you get that every month that you are employed
      If you invest anything the upside potential is very variable so you au least need a proper offset in place for when you score a loss.

    • @FirstSkills
      @FirstSkills Před 8 měsíci +1

      This is such a lame view of capital gains. In an scenario of increased global mobility, it is easy for capital to move out of the country. Capitalists drive this economy. Here I refer to data not some opinion based on emotions. I say CGT should be lowered to attract capital and drive the economy further. People are better off paying taxes in a growing economy. Paying higher tax on a higher income is better than paying lower tax in an economy in shambles

  • @leopoldleoleo
    @leopoldleoleo Před 8 měsíci +10

    THIS is what journalism should be like.

  • @peterjohnduquemin
    @peterjohnduquemin Před 7 měsíci

    How refreshing to hear a sensible discussion about wealth redistribution. Reading some of the comments below I wonder how many people watching really understand the main difference of this argument. The government needs tax revenues to do stuff (hospitals, education, army, police, social services etc.). Suggesting that the richest people (in terms of WEALTH not just income) in the country pay more tax seems eminently sensible to me. Statements like "how would a retired teacher living in a £1m house in London be able to pay more if the Council tax was changed to be 0.5% of a property's value" blow my mind. Sell your house and buy a property valued at £500,000 or move from London and buy a similar property elsewhere for even less. Look at public services over the past 20 years. Everyone I ask if living in the UK has got better or worse over the past 20 years replies "worse". We need serious change.

  • @plweis7203
    @plweis7203 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Relying on Labour for any sensible solution is naive in the extreme. They’ve only ever made things worse.

  • @J1122
    @J1122 Před 8 měsíci +6

    i work 7 days a week pushing a hoover & mop about. I have 2 jobs one is £15 per hour & the other is £11.50 per hour. I am basically working one job to pay my tax, national insurance my rent & council tax.

    • @stewartlewis3503
      @stewartlewis3503 Před 8 měsíci +1

      The reason for the backlash against Globalisation. The income and lifestyle any job can provide a person is ceasing to be determined by the country they live in and the norms of that country, and increasingly now by the 'Global' average lifestyle for that job. Well done for being a cleaner, it's a valuable and important job, but say India with its approximately 20% of the global population. Do you think the average cleaner in India lives the lifestyle of a working class person in the UK, possibly a 'proper' place to live, schooling, public health services, possibly a car, a holiday, a smart phone a holiday? Or do you think they live in abject poverty in a slum?

    • @jaswinderupaul1810
      @jaswinderupaul1810 Před 8 dny

      What a comment!

  • @nickbuckle646
    @nickbuckle646 Před 8 měsíci +14

    Surely if tenants don't have to pay council tax it will just get reflected in their rent instead?

    • @philipjones3599
      @philipjones3599 Před 8 měsíci +1

      In addition properties that in London would overnight lose half their value or more.

  • @paulthreesixty
    @paulthreesixty Před 8 měsíci +1

    We should be seeing this conversation all over the media! I would love to see this get real traction, because although I'm keen to see the tax system become more fair, I've never heard a way suggested that the media couldn't spin easily to rile up the type of aspirational tory voters/gammons who vote outside of their own interests. Great to see. Honestly a shame that you're not standing for election.

  • @capitalcrud9062
    @capitalcrud9062 Před 2 měsíci

    I came up with these ideas 20 years ago as a young man…glad to see that the simple idea of taxing the rich is getting popular

  • @user-mn4cc6bb7t
    @user-mn4cc6bb7t Před 8 měsíci +4

    As someone with an economics degree and now a retired chartered accountant, I have heard most of Harry's ideas for change before, albeit maybe in a slightly different context and sadly it seems a bit like Groundhog Day. I feel that the nut the Labour government tried to crack in the 1970s by bring in Inheritance Tax (with exemptions for family-run firms and farms) seemed a good way forward, as the rates were higher than under the previous death duties regime. This was watered down when Thatcher came to power and has never been reinstated.
    One issue is the number of loopholes that our complicated tax system throws up that wealthy people can pay accountants to exploit on their behalf. We also need to work out a better way of stopping people moving wealth overseas (except for genuine investment) and that may mean punitive taxes when the money is repatriated.
    We also need to have a tax that is more akin to Capital Gains Tax than Stamp Duty when people move house. That needs a bit of fine tuning to avoid innocent people being hammered but successive policies have just resulted in house prices escalating wildly in my lifetime to the point where young people can't expect to own property or get a mortgage until they are middle-aged.
    I could go on but the more I think about the more I realise that the UK is being governed by people who are pandering to a small proportion of the population and the rest just have to lump it.

  • @jabberwockytdi8901
    @jabberwockytdi8901 Před 8 měsíci +20

    On the plus side we have by far the largest tax free personal allowance in Europe, but the de-linking of allowances and tax bands from inflation when we have 10% p.a. is a serious kick in the teeth....... The german constitution states that the basic cost of living should be tax free, german tax system is no where near achieving that , but would be a good base for the personal allowance in the UK , then would have to be more like 20k/annum with appropriate additonal allowances for other adults and children supported.

    • @jusw
      @jusw Před 8 měsíci +5

      Agree, but reducing the burden of taxation on regular income needs to be offset by raising that tax revenue somewhere else, which is what Harry Lambert is suggesting could (and morally, should) be increased taxation on capital (wealth).

  • @BrunyeeSalers
    @BrunyeeSalers Před 8 měsíci

    Would like to read the whole of Harry’s articles - where can I find it. Such a thought provoking piece xx

    • @NewStatesman
      @NewStatesman  Před 7 měsíci

      Thanks for your feedback, glad you enjoyed the video. The link to the article is in the description.

  • @ApexCypher_
    @ApexCypher_ Před 7 měsíci

    What a lot of people don’t know is that the top 10% of earners pay 90% of the tax. The issue now is that anyone on over £125k is paying 60% tax. That’s why 12,500 millionaires have left the UK since 2017. Taxing the top 10 percentage in to oblivion is going to mean massive tax rises for the 90%. The average tax wedge has already risen from 30.9% in 2020 to 34.6% in 2021. The whole tax system needs to be reformed as we’re already seeing the 90% of earners being forced in to higher tax.

  • @georgesotiriou7051
    @georgesotiriou7051 Před 8 měsíci +13

    It's time for a Land Value Tax

    • @kevoreilly6557
      @kevoreilly6557 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Yup. In the US I pay the property tax on both my own and rental properties - same rate

    • @kayedal-haddad9294
      @kayedal-haddad9294 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Long overdue: I would replace Business Rates and Council Taxes with a Land Value Tax!

  • @John-se7rc
    @John-se7rc Před 8 měsíci +17

    Politicians have been using taxpayers as cashcows for decades. Lib/lab/con all help themselves to taxpayers money.

    • @fredatlas4396
      @fredatlas4396 Před 8 měsíci

      No just the tories giving big tax cuts for big corporate businesses and the wealthy and higher payed since 2010, and at the exact same time slashing funding in real terms adjusted for inflation for all public services to its lowest levels in in well over 40 yrs or more. And screwing the rest of us basic rate tax payers etc

  • @maureentravers3419
    @maureentravers3419 Před 5 měsíci

    Really enjoyed this intelligent logical considerate discussion . 😊 I was fixed on it, (I’m trying to cook.)! More please , I hope your both part of the future in UK politics. Happy Christmas.

  • @joshallison153
    @joshallison153 Před 8 měsíci +1

    On CGT: Problem might not be the lower capital gains tax, since everyone is taxed the same CGT, but the opportunity for people to control capital in the first place. If you buy stocks, and sell for a profit, you pay the same tax as Rishi. Everyones' pension, for example, is invested into assets.

  • @johnnybarrick7323
    @johnnybarrick7323 Před 8 měsíci +11

    Absolutely spot on analysis I don't understand why these ideas are not being hammered home by Labour.

    • @paulmessenger9836
      @paulmessenger9836 Před 8 měsíci

      Really have you been listening the past 30 years labour don't care about the working classes

    • @tomlxyz
      @tomlxyz Před 8 měsíci

      The leader of the labor party is just a rich person too with income from capital gains. Not as rich but he certainly benefits from the current system

    • @hakattak
      @hakattak Před 8 měsíci

      Look what happened to Corbyn, the public rather have BoJo than any radical shift in tax structure and infrastructure spend. We’re getting what we voted for, not sure why people are moaning.

    • @paulmessenger9836
      @paulmessenger9836 Před 8 měsíci

      Corbyn lol million pound house in London MP pension and wife has a sweat shop in Mexico the your corbyn

    • @HH-zx2lq
      @HH-zx2lq Před 8 měsíci

      Labour is no different from the Conservative. They are both in the same bed

  • @airingcupboard
    @airingcupboard Před 8 měsíci +12

    10:27 - "an aging stagnating society that doesn't want high levels of immigration". Searing. Brilliant piece.

    • @kevoreilly6557
      @kevoreilly6557 Před 8 měsíci +1

      If you want to know the Tory future, read Dickens

  • @NicholasFalk-gs4sd
    @NicholasFalk-gs4sd Před měsícem

    The New Stateman has done a great job in raising the issue of tax reform. Paul Johnson of IFS in his excellent book Follow The Money makes it clear that Britain's property tax system is full of holes as well as grossly unfair. So why doesn't Labour use the excuse of revaluing both domestic and business properties, which is long overdue? They could then introduce charges on land, as in Denmark for example, in selected areas. The extra revenue could be used to return power back to local authorities, and start building the affordable homes young people badly need. Labour needs to plan for posterity, not austerity!

  • @DaBriars
    @DaBriars Před 2 měsíci

    I collected my van from my usual garage after its service and I asked the owner why he no longer opens Saturday as it used to be very handy for me
    He told me it’s no longer worth working a Saturday as you are only working for the tax man
    How is this good for growth and the economy ?

  • @WolfgangVonKempelen838
    @WolfgangVonKempelen838 Před 8 měsíci +4

    My sis pays 60 Euro council tax a year in Belgium. You pay separately for your bins and recycling. The more you pollute the more you pay. Simple

  • @Ralph94oj
    @Ralph94oj Před 8 měsíci +15

    This is wild! There’s barely a difference between torries and so called labour, to hell with them all. It’s the perfect time for a party who actually care about the people to emerge

    • @Boghopper1979
      @Boghopper1979 Před 8 měsíci +2

      In a first past the post system, your best option is to support the least worst viable option. Anything else just helps the worst viable option.
      If you want to support more nuanced parties (rather than broad church parties like Torys and Labour) and expect them to have any power, then you need proportional representation first.

    • @CUNDUNDO
      @CUNDUNDO Před 8 měsíci

      There is no one single party on the face of the earth who cares about the people, human beings only care about themselves not others !

  • @jackiethomas8200
    @jackiethomas8200 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I’ve got a property asset which I took years to contribute towards, I have a low but reasonable rate of pay. The tax system is so unfair. It’s going to take a lot of what I’ve worked hard for. Yes the property has gone up but the money is almost worthless. They have caused the financial crises and inflation by printing money for their own means

  • @niloa1958
    @niloa1958 Před 7 měsíci

    I agree with increasing the capital gains tax. The thinking is in lines with many major economies who have a similar policy wherein capital gains tax is aligned to personal income tax bracket. But, having said that the lower capital gains pulls in more investors into the country who see this gain. If we streamline taxes what is your expectation on the drop in this money and final tax collections? If this drops after the introduction the policy woukd have failed. And then there are secondary and tertiary repercussions...any view please?

  • @mattbrownartwork
    @mattbrownartwork Před 8 měsíci +23

    Excellent work New Stateman - Come on Labour you can be better than these Tory leaches. Economic justice now!

    • @pacman7959
      @pacman7959 Před 8 měsíci

      Labour voter all my life. Now voting conservative because there is no difference. Might as well give it to the OG.

    • @mattbrownartwork
      @mattbrownartwork Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@pacman7959 ✌Tory Troll.

  • @fang_xianfu
    @fang_xianfu Před 8 měsíci +6

    Having poorer areas pay less council tax and richer areas pay more would just mean that the poor areas would get less local government services, wouldn't it?
    I lived in the USA and one of the deep deep inequities in the USA is that schools are funded by local property tax. So poor areas have the worst schools and that keeps those areas poor.
    This would do the same thing but with social care, homelessness prevention, local leisure services, adult education, the arts and music, children's and youth services, etc etc.

    • @antonymossop3135
      @antonymossop3135 Před 8 měsíci +2

      The central government in the UK essentially regulates and controls the council budgets and already effectively redistributes the funding. It's a different system from the US (which itself varies at the state level). So it's already being centrally managed, it's really just where you turn the dial...

    • @markbellamy6965
      @markbellamy6965 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Also lived in the US. The local nature of property taxes is only one of the major issues with it.
      It's a tax on what's is most people largest none liquid asset, that they have no control over it's value or ability sell a fraction of the asset to cover the taxes.
      So what happens is people are priced out of there own homes, because they buy a cheap house, there is a housing boom and they can no longer afford the tax bill. There left with no choice but to sell and relocate to a cheaper area, as they don't have the income to cover the tax.
      Then there's the issue that taxing someone on the value of there property, requires defining the value of that property. The US local authorities spend insane amounts of money doing this yearly and basically every property owner argues and fight the value. Which is just a massive waste of time and money.
      It's just a very stupid way to tax people. The UK council tax is much more sensible system and it would be much better to adjust that, add more bands, adjust how properties are assigned to bands, making the band pricing more reflective of the local situation etc etc. Than go to the regressive and flawed US style system.

    • @themarbleking
      @themarbleking Před 8 měsíci

      The U.S is effectively a third world country. For every billionaire there are thousands of people living on the streets in defacto refugee camps. They are the perfect example of inequality.

    • @slothsarecool
      @slothsarecool Před 8 měsíci

      they’re all going bankrupt anyway 😅 the councils were investing all their money in real estate I guess

  • @dougharris4853
    @dougharris4853 Před 4 měsíci

    100% agree - I have also discovered that as working middle class individual I pay more tax than your typically ultra rich individual. Sadly the more Government brings in the more they will waste - tackle the inefficiencies first

  • @alanrace4156
    @alanrace4156 Před měsícem

    The reason why tax is so high in the UK is that more than 50% of the working population are employed in the public sector which produces Zero wealth for the country. Produce nothing that can be exported to earn money for the UK economy.

  • @simonphelps3680
    @simonphelps3680 Před 8 měsíci +3

    This is exactly the sort of conversation we need to be having. Inequality has damaged the cohesion of this country beyond measure. Continuous growth is a planet wrecking pipe dream.

  • @alextitov2086
    @alextitov2086 Před 8 měsíci +10

    Personally (in case we have something to cut) I would prefer to merge (abolish) the NI (both employee and employer) and income tax at first, as I consider the NI tax as deeply amoral - (1) two taxes - NI and income tax on employment/labor; (2) using PAYE - those 2 taxes are already payed together (they are not separate in actual payment); (3) NI is a cheating tax, as the society should educate people about taxation, rather than hide something under the carpet. After merging, not only the real labor tax becomes explicitly visible and comparable to capital/assets taxes, but it also shows a clear opportunity to cut it. Coming to a council/ property tax, as it is proposed to be based on the property monetary value (i.e. 0.5 %) anyway, I would suggest to think about LVT instead, as I believe it might be more fair.

    • @allamasadi7970
      @allamasadi7970 Před 8 měsíci

      I think another idea is tax increases on the rich are to be used on things that benefit both the poor and the rich, so spending on infrastructure that is near to where both the wealthy and the poor live, I think it makes sense to get the rich on our side

  • @goodrobotsai
    @goodrobotsai Před měsícem

    I never thought I would ever love The New Statesman. Welldone

  • @user-oj4gh7sp5q
    @user-oj4gh7sp5q Před 5 měsíci +1

    But the people paying .01 % still probably pay more in real terms than those who pay 1 percent or more.

  • @mrb5606
    @mrb5606 Před 8 měsíci +15

    Me and the Mrs are in that awful 'just in the 40%' tax bracket. It's an absolute aspiration killer, because you've either gotta smash through it and earn a lot more, and or its really not worth bothering with. And that's where we are at. Why take a promotion with more work, stress, etc. We used to invest money but why risk it when if you dare to make a bit they will hammer you for 40% of tax. Why put in some overtime at work to give half of it to the government. Why try and accumulate any wealth to get smashed with a inheritance tax bill?

    • @stephencharles9054
      @stephencharles9054 Před 8 měsíci +2

      Imagine having an undergrad and masters student loan on top of that. An extra 15% makes that about 58% tax over 50k. Absolutely insane.

    • @neildee9834
      @neildee9834 Před 8 měsíci +1

      This problem of stepped level taxation affects aspiration and survival for both personal situations and business .
      Three times I have grown a small retail business, only to find the vat threshold unconquerable.
      Suddenly reaching a stage where 12% of your turnover becomes tax ( 20% less any input tax) means that what used to be your earnings just disappears overnight.
      I agree that additional taxing of assets rather than taxing work seems more sustainable.

    • @44theastessex
      @44theastessex Před 8 měsíci +5

      That's not how the UK tax works. You'll only pay 40% on the amount above the threshold, not the total value.
      You'll still be earning more than someone in the band below you. Saying otherwise is just a lie, and serves the rich's interests.

    • @GrooveTasticThang
      @GrooveTasticThang Před 8 měsíci

      Indeed these young guys would further tax your hard worked for investments and responsibilities taken. You do the simple work / life balance calculations and decide not to improve your positions. That’s the rub, tax the risk takers and responsible and you kill the economic drivers. IMHO

    • @glowwurm9365
      @glowwurm9365 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Highly unlikely you’ll ever face an inheritance tax bill, it effects a tiny proportion of estates (anything over £1 million).

  • @Borogas33
    @Borogas33 Před 8 měsíci +42

    The problem we have in the UK is compound taxation. Based upon your proposal, its tax wealth instead of income, ok fair enough, but what about all the other taxes? Council Tax, Road Tax, Stamp Duty, Duty on Cigarettes and Alcohol etc. What we need to do is simplify the Tax System so people understand their total tax up front, with no hidden taxes, and then appreciate the absolute waste in Government. If we had a simpler tax system for Business & Income/wealth, that would make more sense.

    • @Matthew_Perks
      @Matthew_Perks Před 8 měsíci

      Agreed.

    • @MayYouLiveLongAndProsper
      @MayYouLiveLongAndProsper Před 8 měsíci

      You forgot the TV tax

    • @carlarthur4442
      @carlarthur4442 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Agree , we were supposed to abolish V A T when we left the E U , seems the average people haven't benefitted from either being a member of the E U or being out of it , when we were in we didn't have much of a say , but we payed the second largest amount in , now were out everything has gone up even more , really can't win .

    • @Tailspin80
      @Tailspin80 Před 7 měsíci +1

      There’s a thing called the Overton window which restricts how fast and how radical changes can be. Any tax change creates winners and losers so it’s very dangerous for a government to stray too far too fast from what has already been normalised. Liz Truss discovered the Overton window in her brief tenure of No 10.

    • @johnbull5394
      @johnbull5394 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Yes but no but. You can consider them stealth taxes, and sometimes they are, but why should I pay the same amount of fuel duty [edit: should read 'Vehicle Excise Duty' not 'fuel duty'] on the 5000 miles I drive for work a year as someone who drives 20000 miles a year when I don't pollute and wear out the road as much? Why should I pay alcohol tax for alcohol I don't drink etc etc?
      The point of some taxes is that they help encourage other behaviour, or raise money which could be used (note I said 'could') be used to mitigate the negative effect of certain actions. Alcohol causes cancer. Smoking causes cancer. Neither have any real health benefits. Is it a good idea to use tax to try to make them less affordable? Should tobacco taxes be used directly to help improve certain NHS departments for those affected? But what if giving up smoking and drinking is easier for the privileged among us and does it become a tax on the poor?
      Hmm. This whole redistribution of wealth is more complicated than I thought, said Dennis Moore.

  • @milkyvanlife
    @milkyvanlife Před 7 měsíci +1

    Ye i stopped paying taxes years ago. I hate thus world. I had to escape, im living in my van off my own back self reliant and loving life in freedom and sticking one up at the government. Im working part time and enjoying nature and getting to know my true spirit. Lets stand together and show our greedy governing powers we will not let them scre us anymore. Stand up for ourselves, dont let fear rule you. We are amazing qnd have such powers inside.

  • @anna3046
    @anna3046 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Capital Gains Tax in btl properties is 28% if you are a higher tax rate payer. It has been reduced in the new budget to 24% tax rate.

  • @smtkelly
    @smtkelly Před 8 měsíci +3

    The council tax was a poor choice to use. It's a tax to provide a (local) service its not linked to house prices but the but a snap shot value to determine its 'volume' in a local area. If you start charging Landlords they will pass it on to the tenant as rent just as with cleaning fee's and deposits supplemental rent increases. If you want to address council tax then re-banding is where you need to look. Properties that have be extensively extended only get re-classed once they are sold, this means you could be paying two bedroom council rates on a 6 bedroom house.
    IMO tax avoidance is where they need to start, those top 1% who have the wealth to make it worth while to pay a legion of accountants to legally shift money around to erase any taxation. I don't find money vulgar but dodging all tax on income very much is.
    I had to do some tax planning (on behalf of someone else) recently I had a team of experienced tax accountants holding my hand and honestly it felt more like something out of Monty python sketch with secret rules and triggers. Really insane space to navigate, impossible without people who know and charge accordingly.
    If labour were really brave they would commission a complete blank slate tax rethink. Transparent, Simpler, fair, apply to all while not purely to clobber the rich (think that would make the UK unattractive place for business). It shouldn't require a PHD in masons handshakes and a 1st from Hogwarts to do sensible tax planning

  • @timwalton840
    @timwalton840 Před 8 měsíci +3

    Harry Lambert was brilliant in this piece. One of the best videos I’ve seen from NS!

  • @cryptospectr
    @cryptospectr Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you so much for raising awareness of this important issue 👏

  • @zbiku82
    @zbiku82 Před 8 měsíci +52

    As a European living in this country for over a decade I can't get my head around how unequal this country is in the matter of taxes and privileges for wealthy nobility lords... Upper class in general. It's crazy.

    • @ch0293
      @ch0293 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Yeah it's like almost a feudal system now

    • @hidesbehindpseudonym1920
      @hidesbehindpseudonym1920 Před 8 měsíci +1

      It's been that way since my ancestors lived in Britain. And they came over on a sailing ship.

    • @zbiku82
      @zbiku82 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@hidesbehindpseudonym1920 Romans? Vikings or Saxons? 😅

    • @P.G.Wodelouse
      @P.G.Wodelouse Před 8 měsíci +1

      i know its shocking how 10% of adults have never worked and nearly a third of adults earn less than the taxable minimum, meaning nearly half of the adult population don't pay income tax. it is disgusting how these poor people don't pay income tax like the rest of us.
      oh wait you probably meant it was unequal somehow the other way around.

    • @richardwyman5975
      @richardwyman5975 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Wodelouse… taking your comment seriously, I’m afraid we need people who have the balls to get off their arses and take risks, and why shouldn’t an investment (and risk) be taxed at a lower figure.
      We live in a nanny state and most people expect the state to pay for them, so this encourages ‘why work mentality’
      I’ve been self employed all my life and have worked through sweat and worry, and now I’m retired and can’t enjoy my life, but the socialist say tax that capitalist pig, why should he be wealthy while I’ve sat on my arse and done f..k all with my life.
      We need rich people, if not, go and live in China and all live the same

  • @martingill6996
    @martingill6996 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Puting council tax onto the owner not the tenant will just increase the rents anyway