First published by: The Guardian
Lib Dems examine options to fast-track £10,000 tax threshold plans
Clegg has called on the government to go faster to lift
allowances, claiming lower income groups were in a state of emergency due to a
squeeze on living standards. The Liberal Democrats have started examining ways to raise billions in higher
taxes on the rich to fund Nick Clegg's call for the government to go faster in lifting the
personal income tax threshold to £10,000.
Clegg's officials admitted that the rate at which the threshold
could be increased would depend on what schemes can be developed before the
budget to fund the proposal. Tax avoidance,
aviation taxes and wealth taxes will all be examined by the Treasury. In a
speech on Thursday Clegg called on the government to go faster in lifting allowances,
saying lower income groups were in a state of emergency owing to a squeeze on
living standards. Alex Henderson, tax partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers,
suggested each £100 increase in the personal allowance cost the government at
least £500m, and raising the threshold from £8,105 to £10,000 would cost
£11bn.
No 10 reacted calmly to Clegg's call, pointing out that the goal
of a £10,000 personal allowance threshold is existing coalition policy. But
Tory MPs were divided, with some warning the chancellor, George Osborne, not to
let the Liberal Democrats grab credit for the policy and others warning the
idea was expensive and unlikely to boost business confidence.
David Ruffley, a Conservative Treasury select committee member,
warned: "There are no free lunches here and I think many of us believe the
best way now to boost business confidence is not pushing it up to £10,000 to
put some more money in the household pockets, but to actually go for payroll
taxes." On the left, many analysts argue lifting the threshold is not
as progressive as it seems since it is not aimed at household income.
Clegg will be delighted that he has highlighted what is a
relatively simple tax policy, saying in his speech: "Cutting income tax is
one of the most direct tools we have to ease the burden on low and middle
earners." The income tax threshold was raised by £1,000 to £7,475 in
the 2010 budget, and the government plans to increase it further to £8,105 this
year.
In his speech Clegg continued to insist he was interested in a
mansion tax, even if some of his officials doubt that such a radical policy can
be pushed through the Treasury by the time of the spring budget.
Lord Oakeshott, the Liberal Democrat peer, urged Clegg to stick
to his guns on the mansion tax, saying: "If we really want to tax the
wealth of the super-rich, mansion tax is the game changer – the only tax the
nondoms and City sharks cannot dodge."
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