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Special rates have been introduced twice within the post-war years, causing income tax in certain circumstances to exceed 100%.
* For 1947-48 a special contribution was payable when a person’s total income exceeded £2,000. For investment income over £5,000 it was 50%. So with income tax at 45% and surtax at 52.5%, the effective rate was 147.5%.
* In 1967-68, the special charge was imposed. For investment income over £8,000, the rate was 45% which - with income tax at 41.25% and surtax at 50% - meant a total rate of 136.25%.
With substantial investment income tax rates were "only" 98% in the mid 70s.
A natural effect of the growing wealth gap (rich get richer, etc) is that the very richest are proportionally richer now than they were before, so the tax is more concentrated higher up the food chain.
Just occured to me that a leftwing and a rightwing utopia have a lot in common. In a leftwing utopia no-one can be bothered to collect the fruit from the fields because they're all living on benefits, in a rightwing utopia no-one collects the fruit because of immigration controls.
Tax paid by the top 1% has TREBLED since the 1970s and they now pay almost 27% of all income tax
Analysis of income tax records shows the top 1% per cent pay 27% of income tax
In 1976, the top 1% of earners paid just 11% of the income tax to the Treasury
Almost all income tax in Britain is paid by those on more than £51,400 a year
Good job we aren't importing lots of low paid people
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