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    #21
    Aren't tax credits/UC a way of easing the tax burden for those on lower pay?
    Scoots still says that Apr 2020 didn't mark the start of a new stock bull market.

    Comment


      #22
      Originally posted by malvolio View Post

      That's actually a list of one item, in this context...

      Yes, I do actually understand that list; I'm not on an infinite income myself. But it does ease the burden on other stuff people buy that isn't food (including the takeaways/Deliveroos many of the lower paid seem to live on) and other living costs such as fuel (how much of a litre of petrol or 1 KWh is VAT?), and it is a positive comfort factor. If it encourages commerce then it is a positive. If it encourages more borrow-to-buy spending then it is at best neutral, but possibly slightly inflationary. Overall I believe it is a good thing. YMMV (and if you do, try a more relevant argument!).
      Ah, yes, nice bit of Wailing there.

      Reducing VAT is a nice idea, particularly if it is off energy. reducing it off luxuries has a bigger positive impact for Tory voters than for the general population.

      The Tory voters will also conveniently forget who it was that raised it from 8% to 15% (1979), then from 15% to 17.5% (1991) and from 17.5% to 20% (2011). They also forget who reduced VAT on domestic fuel & power (down to 5% in 1997).

      And where will the money come from to plug the gap, or does the government just increase borrowing like it has been doing for the last decade? Austerity didn't work. Trickle down didn't work. And yet it's always someone else's fault.
      …Maybe we ain’t that young anymore

      Comment


        #23
        Originally posted by WTFH View Post

        Banging on about VAT reduction as if that will put money into the poorest pockets is typical of Tory policy. Inflation in double digits will not be offset by a 1% or 5% reduction in VAT.

        Let's look at the most important things in life - food & drink.
        What is the VAT on meat?
        What is the VAT on fruit & veg?
        What is the VAT on cereals & pulses?
        What is the VAT on culinary herbs?
        What is the VAT on canned/frozen food (excluding ice cream)?
        What is the VAT on milk?
        What is the VAT on tea?
        What is the VAT on coffee?

        How will reducing VAT help people trying to have food on their plates?
        There is an argument the cost of things include overheads which are taxed and thanks to the B word could now be subsidised/ made more efficient.

        https://ahdb.org.uk/estimated-milk-production-costs

        Though VAT is not the right hammer in many cases.

        Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much.

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by Zigenare View Post

          Ok clever clogs, how would *you* fix the current cost of living crisis?
          Step 1. Invent a time machine and go back in time

          You can probably figure out the rest of the steps.
          Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!

          Comment


            #25
            Originally posted by WTFH View Post

            Ah, yes, nice bit of Wailing there.

            Reducing VAT is a nice idea, particularly if it is off energy. reducing it off luxuries has a bigger positive impact for Tory voters than for the general population.

            The Tory voters will also conveniently forget who it was that raised it from 8% to 15% (1979), then from 15% to 17.5% (1991) and from 17.5% to 20% (2011). They also forget who reduced VAT on domestic fuel & power (down to 5% in 1997).

            And where will the money come from to plug the gap, or does the government just increase borrowing like it has been doing for the last decade? Austerity didn't work. Trickle down didn't work. And yet it's always someone else's fault.
            Who did what when is a lot more of a distraction from the argument than thinking I get all my knowledge from the Mail (as opposed to the equally nonsensical Grauniad I suppose).

            It's the now we need to address. How we got here is irrelevant.
            Blog? What blog...?

            Comment


              #26
              Originally posted by malvolio View Post
              Who did what when is a lot more of a distraction from the argument ...
              It's the now we need to address. How we got here is irrelevant.
              Who did what and when is not a distraction if we want to learn from our mistakes now.
              How do we address the now situation? Is it by repeating mistakes, or learning from them and doing something different - such as taxing dividends and off-shore?
              …Maybe we ain’t that young anymore

              Comment


                #27
                Originally posted by d000hg View Post
                What is the correct response then? Spend or save?
                Give to charity

                Comment


                  #28
                  Originally posted by WTFH View Post

                  Who did what and when is not a distraction if we want to learn from our mistakes now.
                  How do we address the now situation? Is it by repeating mistakes, or learning from them and doing something different - such as taxing dividends and off-shore?
                  OK. The last time we were in such financial straits was was the late 70s. We got out of that by Thatcher's difficult and painful monetarist policies, which were all about putting spending back in the hands of the populace, not government and getting key industries out of their nationalised inertia. Since austerity has failed and the recent shift to a more socialist-light economic pattern of high tax/high public spends has also failed, perhaps we should try the 80s approach again. Or is that too istorical to be relevant?

                  And taxing dividends is utterly hopeless, incidentally. The individuals who can go offshore will do so, taking their investments with them. The national institutions that rely on them to pay minor stuff like retirement pensions will be hammered. Other businesses, like the trains for instance, will also lose large investors meaning their income disappears. And how exactly do you plan to tax "offshore" - apart from anything else (such as Amazon and Google inter alia), we have no jurisdiction and if Infosys decides not to pay UK CT, what would we do about it?
                  Blog? What blog...?

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Originally posted by malvolio View Post

                    OK. The last time we were in such financial straits was was the late 70s. We got out of that by Thatcher's difficult and painful monetarist policies, which were all about putting spending back in the hands of the populace, not government and getting key industries out of their nationalised inertia. Since austerity has failed and the recent shift to a more socialist-light economic pattern of high tax/high public spends has also failed, perhaps we should try the 80s approach again. Or is that too istorical to be relevant?

                    The idea that the government of the last decade have been anything socialist is a joke. The fact that you believe it is some left wing crowd just illustrates the problem.

                    Thatcher's policies involved selling off everything that was nationalised. The government has nothing left to sell to the public apart from the DVLA, the passport office and the roads, but it could sell off the NHS to the American businesses.

                    Originally posted by malvolio View Post
                    And taxing dividends is utterly hopeless, incidentally.
                    The last time it was tried, what happened?

                    It's a slippery slope to tax the rich, eh? So just keep hammering the poor is that your solution?
                    Remove care, remove benefits, remove any sense of worth, but make sure we blame them, with their mobile phones (that they need to have to be able to get benefits), and look at the amount of handouts we give them, it's almost as much as Dido Harding made for her mates with Test & Trace, or the other contracts that went to Friends of the Tories.
                    …Maybe we ain’t that young anymore

                    Comment


                      #30
                      OK, ignore the argument, stick to tired, Spectator-inspired rhetoric and ancient chimeras like selling the NHs to the Americans. Any idea just how foolish that sounds?

                      High taxation to fund high public spending on large infrastructure projects is pure socialist thinking. The Conservative way is to enable private enterprise to do it for you - and not by using Blair's idiotic PFI mechanisms. After all, it worked for the Victorians.

                      Enjoy your little world. It seems nice.
                      Blog? What blog...?

                      Comment

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