Monday 20 November 2023

At The Threshold

Inheritance tax is unpopular because far more people expect to pay it than ever would. The cuts that would be necessary to abolish it, or to reduce it considerably, would be very, very, very unpopular, indeed. Even before people worked out that such abolition or reduction would either benefit Rishi Sunak's daughters by hundreds of millions of pounds, or would make no difference to them, since all the paperwork would be in place for them to avoid inheritance tax altogether. So Sunak is dropping hints about income tax instead.

But 42 per cent of adults have incomes that do not reach the threshold for income tax. No, not "before benefits". Those are taxable income. Two in five adults have gross incomes, from all sources, of less of than one thousand pounds per month. Of those in that position, the great majority are in work, rising to the overwhelming majority of those below pensionable age. If that does not sound like the Britain that you know, then you need to get out more.

Jeremy Hunt's headline measure on Wednesday may be something like an increase in the income tax threshold. But I doubt it. The boundary changes have once again made decisive the votes of those who veered between one side of the Austerity Coalition and the other. Hence the return of David Cameron, who won the 2015 General Election.

And whatever Hunt did come up with, then Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves will say that it did not go far enough. They are already doing so. The last Labour Government effected the biggest upward redistribution of wealth in British history. Labour is now the greater evil, worse than the Tories. We should no more want it to win the next General Election than most of its MPs wanted it to win the last two, or than any of its staff wanted it to win the last four.

But when I tell you that there is going to be a hung Parliament, then you can take that to the bank. I spent the 2005 Parliament saying that it was psephologically impossible for the Heir to Blair's Conservative Party to win an overall majority. I predicted a hung Parliament on the day that the 2017 General Election was called, and I stuck to that, entirely alone, all the way up to the publication of the exit poll eight long weeks later. And on the day that Sunak became Prime Minister, I predicted that a General Election between him and Starmer would result in a hung Parliament.

To strengthen families and communities by securing economic equality and international peace through the democratic political control of the means to those ends, including national and parliamentary sovereignty, we need to hold the balance of power. Owing nothing to either main party, we must be open to the better offer. There does, however, need to be a better offer. Not a lesser evil, which in any case the Labour Party is not.

4 comments:

  1. No cuts would be needed since economists say the government has £10 billion available for tax cuts without making any cuts. The “death tax” is wrong in principle since it’s a tax on money that has already been taxed, and a punishment for doing the right and saving for your children instead of spending on yourself.

    Inheritance (like all hereditary institutions from the Monarchy to the hereditary peers) embodies Edmund Burke’s description of society as a contract between the dead, the living and the unborn.

    And there are plenty of easy and very popular spending cuts-such as scrapping HS2 and the thousands of useless “equality and diversity” jobs all over the public sector for a start.

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    1. Patrick Minford?

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    2. He and Liz Truss should be made to go round South West Norfolk, to make the case for his view that Britain ought to have no agriculture.

      In general, though, anyone who still believed in Trussonomics ought to vote Labour. Labour opposed only one mini-Budget measure, the only one that Truss had not pitched to the Conservative Party membership, and it would have abstained if there had ever been a Commons division on the mini-Budget.

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