I suppose that if there is anything to be said in mitigation of George Osborne's astonishingly inept remark, it is perhaps that, while he might at least be reasonably well aware of the various tax loopholes that currently exist, he may not actually have realised that these were so useful to some very wealthy people that they could get away with paying little or no tax at all; whilst, as Chancellor of the Exchequer, he ought to be expected to know a fair bit about the economy, taxation and the place of people at all income levels within such an economy and taxation régime, he could not be expected to have precise details of how much tax any and every wealthy individual actually pays. That's not any sort of excuse, of course - just a balancing observation.
As I've said before, the taxation system is in desperate need of radical and fundamental reform by simplification. The simpler the tax régime, the harder it becomes (and the less incentive there is) to create viable loopholes in the first place; the costs of inspection and collection would plummet, as would the margin for errors in assessment and collection. The only possible losers would be the accountants and tax lawyers, because they'd have far less work to do. To what extent has Mr Osborne seized the opportunity that is open only to him to address this overwhelming problem? None, as far as I can see.
As I've said before, the taxation system is in desperate need of radical and fundamental reform by simplification. The simpler the tax régime, the harder it becomes (and the less incentive there is) to create viable loopholes in the first place; the costs of inspection and collection would plummet, as would the margin for errors in assessment and collection. The only possible losers would be the accountants and tax lawyers, because they'd have far less work to do. To what extent has Mr Osborne seized the opportunity that is open only to him to address this overwhelming problem? None, as far as I can see.
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