Originally posted by Beef Oven!
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State of the parties as 2015 General Election looms.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI share your suspicion, largely because they are not only divisive but rarely achieve the intended results.
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amateur51
Not sure about Reckless, this is Priceless!
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostYou've already started a thread to discuss this, can we please get back on topic? I'll help you with a question. Do you think that the housing tax will help Labour in the run up to the election, or hinder them? Or do you think someone like Clegg will nick it back off them and take the Libdems even further down the polls/up the polls?
Rich people pay too little tax IMV
BUT, because of the fact that (with a few exceptions) everyone in politics agrees on most things we aren't going to get a real choice at all.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI'm suspicious of 'purely' ideologically-driven taxation like 'bedroom tax' 'poll tax' and 'mansion' tax. Sadly, at least in theory, many people agree with these anti-people taxes.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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Originally posted by french frank View PostYou may be suspicious, but I asked what was WRONG with it. The ideology of the mansion tax is quite the opposite of the ideology of the bedroom tax - and the poll tax. Tax has to be raised to provide services. It seems right to collect it from wealth and to provide (most urgently, not exclusively) the services needed by the less well-off/disadvantaged. That is what seems to me right about one ideology and wrong about the other. That's just a general comment which doesn't imply complete acceptance of the Balls plan. I just don't understand your blanket objection to 'ideology'.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostI think what would help "US" would be for those in power to make an effort to try and reduce the gap in wealth between the richest and the poorest rather than choosing "policies" that appeal to self interest.
Rich people pay too little tax IMV
BUT, because of the fact that (with a few exceptions) everyone in politics agrees on most things we aren't going to get a real choice at all.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostYou may be suspicious, but I asked what was WRONG with it. The ideology of the mansion tax is quite the opposite of the ideology of the bedroom tax - and the poll tax. Tax has to be raised to provide services. It seems right to collect it from wealth and to provide (most urgently, not exclusively) the services needed by the less well-off/disadvantaged. That is what seems to me right about one ideology and wrong about the other. That's just a general comment which doesn't imply complete acceptance of the Balls plan. I just don't understand your blanket objection to 'ideology'.
1. It willl adversely affect property prices on a top-down basis so their sales will generate less tax than they might otherwise have done (this will accordingly disadvantage people whose properties fall below that threshold)
2. It will discourage some people from selling high value properties, including putting them into trust in order to avoid future tax liability
3. It will encourage those wioshing to sell them to break them into bits of which the value of each of which will be below the tax threshold
4. Those properties that do see won't bring in sufficient tax to justify its implementation.
You write that tax "has to be raised to provide services" and that it "seems right to collect it from wealth and to provide (most urgently, not exclusively) the services needed by the less well-off/disadvantaged". Whilst of course that's true in principle, to what extent is it so in practice? Think of the amouts of tax that are spent, for example, on the following:
1. State retirement benefit for the very wealthy
2. State sponsored tax avoidance mechanisms for the very wealthy such as ISAs and pension tax relief (for all that the latter's been pared back considerably of late)
3. A considerable proportion of the defence budget
4. Education, police and other services, most importantly NHS that are also used by the very wealthy.
To what extent and in what ways are these examples of tax receipts being allocated to provide "the services needed by the less well-off/disadvantaged"?
Then look at VAT. Wealth taxes (not that we have them in Britain), Inheritance Tax, Corporation Tax and, to a lesser extent, Capital Gains Tax are among the easier taxes to avoid and/or mitigate; VAT is one of the hardest. This being the case (as I mentioned in the cut-and-thrust on who'd derive what benefit from increases in the income tax Personal Allowance), "the less well off/disadvantaged" are not only unable to avoid paying VAT on their essential VATable purchases but the rate of VAT is the same for them as it is for multi-millionaires; how equitable is that?
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI'm not worried about the gap between rich and poor, I'm concerned that poor people escape their poverty, through the creation of wealth and the raising of living standards.
Economic "growth" is always at the expense of someone, whether they are next door or in another country.
The assumption that everything should "grow" needs challenging IMV
String quartets ?
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostThat's your view. Mine's different. I'm not worried about the gap between rich and poor, I'm concerned that poor people escape their poverty, through the creation of wealth and the raising of living standards. As a former poor person, I can guarantee you it is far better that the whole nation is better off, rather than worrying about what my neighbour owns!
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSo the same old thing about consuming more and more and more then ?
Economic "growth" is always at the expense of someone, whether they are next door or in another country.
The assumption that everything should "grow" needs challenging IMV
String quartets ?
Who is talking about economic growth? Economic growth is not a zero-sum game, anyway.
It's about increasing the wealth of a nation, not measuring economic activity.
Why not talk about something else? Yes, string quartets.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostSo the same old thing about consuming more and more and more then ?
Economic "growth" is always at the expense of someone, whether they are next door or in another country.
The assumption that everything should "grow" needs challenging IMV
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostNothing to do with consuming more and more.
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View Postwhy not talk about something else? Yes, string quartets.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThis is where I disagree with you. The number of people below what anyone in the Western world would agree is the poverty line exceeds that of the total population of China; lifting them all out of their poverty will inevitably involve consuming more - and by that I do not mean expensive supercars, private jets and the rest but those things that are the basics of life. Many millions of people do not have reliable supplies of water and food to consume or energy to use and these are all things that will be consumed in vastly greater quantities as part of the successful addressing of that overarching poverty.
'Consuming more and more' is what MrGG said. Consumption per se, is not problematic.
The Soviet Union was very good at increasing economic growth, but failed to create wealth and lift its population's living standards.
Well, some might argue that there's even room for growth there! On the thread devoted to talking about them, mention has unsurprisingly been made of the wonders of Mozart's string quintets compared to most of his quartets...
The Soviet Union was very good at increasing economic growth, but failed to create wealth and lift its population's living standards.
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