In 1988, the taxation of wealth at a lower rate than earnings was corrected by Margaret Thatcher and Nigel Lawson. But in 1998, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown put the clock back to the Chancellor of the Exchequer who had gone on, as First Lord of the Treasury, to introduce monetarism to Britain 50 years ago this December. Now, though, even Wes Streeting wants to tax capital gains at the same rate as earnings.
Yet Thatcher must never have seen a banknote, since she thought that the State had no money of its own. In reality, the issuing of currency is an act of the State, which is literally the creator of all money. As a sovereign state with its own free-floating, fiat currency, the United Kingdom has as much of that currency as it chooses to issue to itself, with readily available fiscal and monetary means of controlling any inflationary effect, means that therefore need to be under democratic political control. The responsibility of the Government is to ensure the supply of goods and services to be purchased with that currency.
It is impossible for the currency-issuing State to run out of money. Money “lent” to the Treasury by the Bank of England is money “lent” to the State by the State; such “debt” will never be called in, much less will bailiffs be sent round. Call this “the Magic Money Tree” if you will. There is no comparison between running the economy and managing a household budget, or even a business. There is no “national credit card” to “max out”. “Fiscal headroom” is only the gap between the Government’s tax and spending plans and what would be allowed under the fiscal rules that it sets for itself and changes frequently.
That is what both fiscal policy and monetary policy are for: to give the currency its value by controlling inflation to a politically chosen extent while discouraging certain politically chosen forms of behaviour, and while encouraging others, including economic equality, which is fundamental to social cohesion and thus to patriotism. If there were “no such thing as society”, and Thatcher really did say that, then there could be no such thing as the society that was the family, or the society that was the nation. But there is no debt. It is an accounting trick. The Treasury, which is the State, has mostly issued bonds to the Bank of England, which is the State. Even when those bonds were held by the big scary “bond market”, then the State could simply issue itself with enough of its own free-floating, fiat currency to redeem them. Say it again that there is no debt. There is no debt. There is no debt.
The money can always be found for wars. But taxation is not where the State’s money comes from. Nothing is “unaffordable”, every recession is discretionary on the part of the Government, and there is no such thing as “taxpayers’ money”. Within and under that understanding, a tax of one to two per cent on assets above £10 million could make up the abolition of the two-child benefit cap 17 times over, while merely taxing each of Britain’s 173 billionaires down to one billion pounds per head would raise £1.1 trillion, an entire year’s tax take. And so on. With the Gulf looking a lot less attractive, the tiny numbers of people directly affected would not get a better deal anywhere where they might ever wish to live. Even the putative Iranian nuclear cloud has a silver lining.
There was never any case for retaining the two-child benefit cap or for withdrawing the Winter Fuel Payment from anyone, and there is none for cutting the benefits of the sick and disabled as if that would cure them or find them jobs, or for increasing workers’ bus fares by 50 per cent, or for failing to freeze Council Tax, or for threatening to abolish the single person discount, or for increasing employers’ National Insurance contributions so as to destroy charities and small businesses while making it impossible for big businesses to take on staff or to increase wages, or for forcing working farmers of many decades’ standing who formally inherited their parents’ farms to sell them to giant American agribusinesses, or for any other form of austerity.
There is an unanswerable economic and moral case for the full compensation of, among others, the victims of Orgreave, Grenfell Tower, the Windrush scandal, the Post Office scandal, and the contaminated blood scandal, as well as the nuclear test veterans, the WASPI women, and those, such as Andrew Malkinson, who had been wrongfully imprisoned. All while renationalising the railways, the water companies, the Royal Mail that pretty much seems to have given up, and the energy companies that have tripled their standing charges since 2021 while their captive “regulator” increased their cap to order.