Ignoring the other (more difficult) part of the equation - cutting spending, what tax/es would you like cut in the spring budget.
For me, payroll NI is a terrible tax that hides the actual burden of taxes on employed PAYE income (which is the vast majority of how working Brits get paid) and allows the govt to conceal the real tax burden on employment. The sooner Employee’s NI gets merged into the income tax rate, the better. So any cut in this is a huge positive in my book. In effect Employer’s NI is also paid by the employee (in the form of a lower salary) but the political argument to cut that is likely impossible to make as it won’t make a pretty Daily Mail headline that its readers would be able to comprehend.
My second candidate is stamp duty on property purchases, at the very least for owner occupiers. It should either be eliminated or reduced to one small flat rate (no more than 1-2%) on all transactions. It doesn’t bring in a lot of money (relatively) but plays an oversized part in gumming up the property market due to its dependence on existing housing stock and chains. It also impedes labour mobility imho.
For me, payroll NI is a terrible tax that hides the actual burden of taxes on employed PAYE income (which is the vast majority of how working Brits get paid) and allows the govt to conceal the real tax burden on employment. The sooner Employee’s NI gets merged into the income tax rate, the better. So any cut in this is a huge positive in my book. In effect Employer’s NI is also paid by the employee (in the form of a lower salary) but the political argument to cut that is likely impossible to make as it won’t make a pretty Daily Mail headline that its readers would be able to comprehend.
My second candidate is stamp duty on property purchases, at the very least for owner occupiers. It should either be eliminated or reduced to one small flat rate (no more than 1-2%) on all transactions. It doesn’t bring in a lot of money (relatively) but plays an oversized part in gumming up the property market due to its dependence on existing housing stock and chains. It also impedes labour mobility imho.
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