Originally posted by Ardesco
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I would like to see eveyone have a social security account to which all benefits (including benefits in kind like free health-care and education) were charged. Anyone whose account was overdrawn would pay a "benefit recovery tax" (a replacement for NI) which takes their overall tax rate on income above the personal allowance up to 50%. (This is actually less draconian than what happens now. People who receive benefits and pay tax lose two-thirds of each extra pound they earn.) The benefits recovery tax paid would be credited to the individual's social security account. People whose accounts were not overdrawn would not pay the tax, so those who pay for private education would be given full credit for the amount they save the state.
Just to drive home my right-wing point to the electorate, I would hypothecate income tax by renaming it social security tax, and by law requiring that it only be used to pay off the debts of those who died leaving their social security account overdrawn. (I made the point in another thread recently that we could afford to abolish income taxes completely if everyone paid for their own benefits.) Note that unlike "social security tax" anywhere else in the world, it would be explicitly clear that any tax a particular individual paid was ear-marked for "other people" and would not in any way benefit the payer. The distinction between "benefits recovery tax" paid, which benefits any payer who doesn't die overdrawn, and social security tax, which never benefits the payer, should increase transparency, and hence make life uncomfortable for left-wing politicians who like to pretend we are all in the same boat, and that in return for our taxes we receive benefits of comparable value.
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