Above photo: Jason Leung.
TUC launches blueprint to squeeze Britainâs multimillionaires for a âmodestâ proportion of their wealth.
And end the countryâs increasing wealth inequality.
United Kingdom â The TUC has condemned a âtale of two Britainsâ which sees working people suffering âthe longest pay squeeze in modern historyâ while bankersâ bonuses are at eye-watering levels and chief executive pay is surging.
The damning criticism came as the TUC launched a blueprint to squeeze Britainâs multimillionaires for a âmodestâ proportion of their wealth and end the countryâs âincreasing wealth inequality.â
The blueprint would raise ÂŁ10 billion for the public purse and should be the âstart of a national conversation about taxing wealth,â said TUC general secretary Paul Nowak.
It would affect only 140,000 individuals â 0.3 per cent of Britainâs population â and is similar to a policy that operates in Spain.
Mr Nowak said: âItâs time to start a national conversation about how we tax wealth in this country.
âIt is absurd that a nurse pays a bigger share of their income in tax than a city trader does on profits from their investment portfolio.
âThatâs not only fundamentally unfair and unjust â itâs bad for our economy too.â
He said that Britainâs âbrokenâ tax system means those at the top are hoarding wealth and getting richer and richer while working people struggle to get by.
âThat is starving our economy of spending â as itâs working people who spend their money on our high streets â and itâs starving our public services of much-needed funds,â Mr Nowak said.
âThis is a debate we should not be afraid of having. The Chancellor should use his autumn statement to make sure the wealthiest pay their fair share of tax.â
He said that as working people suffered a record squeeze on pay âthe super-rich are coining it in.â
âPorsche sales are at record highs, bankersâ bonuses are at eyewatering levels, and CEO pay is surging,â he added.
âEnough is enough. We need an economy that rewards work â not just wealth.
âFair tax must play a central role in rewiring our economy to work for working people.â
The analysis sets out options for taxing the small number of individuals with wealth of more than ÂŁ3 million, ÂŁ5m and ÂŁ10m, excluding pensions.
The lower tax on people with more than ÂŁ3m would affect 142,000 wealthy people, the tax on those with more than ÂŁ5m would affect 48,000 and the tax on those with more than ÂŁ10m would affect 17,000.
The system would mean that someone with ÂŁ3m would pay nothing, someone with more than ÂŁ5m would pay ÂŁ17,000 and someone with ÂŁ10 million would pay ÂŁ118,000.
âTogether this could raise more than ÂŁ10 billion for the exchequer,â said the TUC.
The TUC has already called on the government to equalise capital gains tax with income tax, which could raise around ÂŁ14 billion.
It condemned as âinherently unfair and unjustâ the fact that people who get income from assets or property are taxed less than those who rely on real work.
While working people have been âhit by a pay loss of historic proportionsâ the wealth of multimillionaires and billionaires has boomed, said the TUC.
Campaign group Tax Justice UK, which earlier this year drew up proposals to raise up to ÂŁ50 billion through taxing the super-wealthy, welcomed the TUCâs proposals.
Executive director Robert Palmer said: âWith public services on their knees, and wealth inequality rampant, itâs high time the UK started taxing wealth properly. Itâs great to see the TUC champion steps towards a fairer tax system.â
He said the public was âcrying out for actionâ which would âgo a long way towards raising money desperately needed for our schools, NHS and social security system.â
Source: Popularresistance.org