Originally posted by P. G. Tipps
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Promises promises
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostI knew it would be a waste of time explaining it to you. ts's figures are perfectly clear, except to someone who doesn't want to understand. You must have driven those poor Jesuits to despair, Scotty (although you've learnt other lessons from them to perfection)
T's figures may be perfectly clear to you, Flosshilde, but they bear little relation to the relevant ones on the gov.uk website!
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostQuite; that's why it's a red herring as far as helping the low-paid is concerned - but then that's not really what the present government wants to do.It's been of greater benefit to people at the top end; therefore it's actually regressive.
The article ts quotes says: "The poorest 10% lose on average approximately 43% of their incomes through various forms of taxation whilst the richest pay only 35% of their incomes." They are arguing that the tax system on the whole is "regressive". The increase in personal allowances will mean the poorest pay a smaller percentage of their income on tax - so that policy itself is not "regressive".It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by french frank View Postthat policy itself is not "regressive"
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostIf you earn 50k a year your top rate is 40%. On your last 1k your marginal rate is 40
%. Therefore, if the threshold is raised 1000 by your tax bill reduces by £400 PA, because you have 1k extra completely free of tax, and you gain at your highest rate.
But if you are on 20k, your marginal rate is 20 %, so if the threshold goes up 1000, you gain by only £200 pa.
Zero (income below Personal Allowance)
20% (income from Personal Allowance up to c.£31,800)
40% (income above c.£31,800)
45% (income above £150,000)
There is in addition a progressive reduction of the Personal Allowance for incomes between £100,000 and £120,000 (I think those are the sums that apply to this), so anyone with an income in excess of £120 pays income tax at 20% on all income up to £31,800 whereas those on incomes below £100,000 pay no tax on their income up to the Personal Allowance figure.
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostIf you are already below the threshold level, earning say £10k, you benefit by zero. So the better off you are, the bigger the benefit.
That said, your assertion that the lower paid generally pay a higher proportion of their income in tax is nevertheless true, because what you're referring to in so saying is not just income tax but taxes in general. The smaller the income, the greater the likelihood that a larger proportion (or indeed all) of it gets spent and some of that spending will inevitably include VAT; someone on, say, an income of £150K+ might well spend a far smaller proportion of his/her income and therefore pays a great deal less in VAT, so the proportion of his/her income that attracts taxes of any and all kinds is likely to be lower than that of someone on a low income who has no choice but to spend it all. Another example of top end benefit is that of the self-employed sole trader whose taxable profit exceeds c.£42K, at which point Class 4 NIC tax drops from 9% to 2%; likewise, above that same figure, employees pay no additional NIC1 taxes, so an employee whose income puts him/her in the 45% income tax bracket pays the same NIC1 tax as one whose employed income is £42K.Last edited by ahinton; 17-10-14, 10:17.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe article ts quotes says: "The poorest 10% lose on average approximately 43% of their incomes through various forms of taxation whilst the richest pay only 35% of their incomes." They are arguing that the tax system on the whole is "regressive". The increase in personal allowances will mean the poorest pay a smaller percentage of their income on tax - so that policy itself is not "regressive".
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We seem to have (conveniently for some) veered off the issue of the Personal Income Tax Allowance to the perceived fairness or unfairness of Income Tax rates in general. That is a quite different debate.
My argument was with those here who continue to insist that raising the tax threshold assists the tax-payer at the top rather than him/her at the bottom.
Ahinton's official figures ... which were always available to anyone who took the trouble to check online ... demonstrates that that insistence (or rather the claim behind it) is quite false.
Now we can all move on!
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostMakes him sound rather like Fotherington-Thomas (which I'm sure he's not :smiley:)
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostWe seem to have (conveniently for some) veered off the issue of the Personal Income Tax Allowance to the perceived fairness or unfairness of Income Tax rates in general. That is a quite different debate.
Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostMy argument was with those here who continue to insist that raising the tax threshold assists the tax-payer at the top rather than him/her at the bottom.
The point that you make about the effect of raising the income tax threshold is therefore not so much wrong per se but only part of the story and I think that the mistake that you therefore make is to try to see it in isolation in an effort to try to prove that point.Last edited by ahinton; 17-10-14, 13:52.
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Nobody's arguing with you, ahinton, certainly not me!
But we were talking about the Income Tax Threshold not the rates of Income Tax in general.
We were told on this thread that raising that threshold alone benefited those taxpayers at the top rather than the bottom. I simply said this wasn't true and the actual figures have fully supported my belief.
Check it out!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostYes but it doesn't really make sense to separate one non-regressive policy from a tax system which, all things taken into account, has for a whole been becoming more regressive. It's the aforementioned 43% that's important to poor people, not which part of it might be the result of one policy or another.
I don't think that this is correct, actually. The problem with what you write here is that you appear to be selecting the "last 1k" earned by the 40% taxpayer, whereas I think that it should be the first 1k of taxable income (i.e. the first £1K above the Pesonal Allowance figure) which is, of course, taxed at 20%,
That seems to make sense to me, although I don't quite get where the 35% comes fromIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View PostNobody's arguing with you, ahinton, certainly not me!
But we were talking about the Income Tax Threshold not the rates of Income Tax in general.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostBut what circumstances might bring about an entire rejig of a system that most people would agree was monstrously unfair and regressive? How can one single policy which, even if just a tiny morsel of non regressive policy, not make sense?
What the system does need - and desperately - is simplification and I imagine that, were this to come about, the extent of the system's regressiveness or otherwise would at the very least become more transparent. There's so much that the taxpayer doesn't understand and the sheer complexities of the current system are such that the margin of error for both taxpayer and HMRC are unacceptably high and the consequences of this makes tax inspection and collection vastly more expensive than it ought or needs to be (and we all know who funds it!).
I think that one problem highlighted by the perception of the income tax régime as regressive is that this is only ever likely to change if there's a complete overhaul and simplification of the tax system as a whole; reforming income tax only would not likely do the trick, the best will in the world notwithstanding.
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