One
of the depressing aspects of this election, as with others which have gone
before, is that the parties feel constrained to argue about which of them will
keep taxes lowest. It’s an argument
predicated on the assumption that tax is always a bad thing, and that people
will always vote for the party which taxes them the least. What it avoids is any debate about the nature
and purpose of taxation.
Even
when politicians do talk about the need to increase taxation, they do it in a
cautious and hesitant fashion. One very
recent example was the Lib Dem promise to raise income tax by 1p
to fund NHS and Social Care. I’m not a
fan, to say the least, of hypothecated taxes like this; saying that this penny
of income tax is for the NHS, that one for Defence, the other one for pensions
isn’t a particularly helpful way of managing government finances, particularly
when circumstances change (as they always do).
It isn’t just the Lib Dems though – look at the hesitancy with which
Labour talk about raising the top rate of income tax. Even in the way in which it was presented, it
was about those who
would not face a tax increase under Labour rather than those who would.
That
isn’t the only aspect of language used which colours debate. Why is taxation, for instance, always
described as a ‘burden’, with debate limited to who should bear this
‘burden’? This sort of language
evidences the underlying assumption that taxation is some form of ‘necessary
evil’; but the idea that it’s an evil of any sort effectively concedes the
ideological argument. The argument that it is better for people to keep more of their own money and decide for
themselves how to spend it is itself an ideological argument, not a statement
of fact. Why is it ‘better’; who decided
that; what are the criteria being used to arrive at that judgement; and where
is the evidence that lower taxation meets those criteria?
There’s
another aspect to all this as well, and that is that the debate usually
concentrates on taxes on income. Part of
the reason for that is that taxes on income are generally more visible – people
looking at their payslips can see immediately how much has been deducted in
tax. VAT, on the other hand, is a lot
less visible. For sure, higher VAT leads
to higher prices, but most consumers when purchasing items don’t distinguish
between VAT and other causes of high prices; the question is only whether the
total price is affordable. So, whilst
the parties get themselves worked up over whether or not VAT will be increased,
it’s a tax which is a lot less visible to most of those paying it.
Taxes
such as VAT are not only less visible than direct taxes on income; they’re also
much less progressive or fair. On most
of the vatable goods and services which most of us buy, we all pay the same
amount, regardless of means. Any shift away
from visible to less visible taxation is in effect a transfer of tax from the
richer to the poorer.
There
is, though, an alternative ideological viewpoint. Tax is, in essence, a good thing, and the
more it’s related to ability to pay the better.
Tax underpins civilisation.
Taxation is one way of ensuring that the economy benefits the many not
the few, and enables the maintenance of a caring and compassionate
society. Seen from this perspective, any
party claiming to be the party of low taxation is a party which is, in effect,
promoting personal selfishness at the expense of community solidarity.
Rejecting
the idea that taxation is something inherently bad, and defending and promoting
the idea that it is central to any society which values all its members, is just
one of the steps which are required if we are to reject the increasing division
of society into haves and have nots.
Where, other than Sweden,
are the politicians brave enough to make the case for taxation in a bold and
assertive fashion?
1 comment:
I remember going into a builders merchants a few years ago to buy some roofing tiles. The guy behind the counter mentioned the price and then added,"and with the dreaded VAT that comes to". Now I've bought stuff there for years and that phrase was always used. It just so happened that I'd been with a much loved aunt a few hours before who had gone through a difficult procedure at a local hospital and I was feeling rather raw. I quietly replied that that I was very pleased to pay the VAT as the tax had ensured that my aunty had been treated well at our local hospital. He looked at me and nodded and I've never heard him use that phrase again.
Post a Comment