20 May 2011

It's time to simplify the tax code & reduce governmental spending


With over 30,000 pages in the UK tax statutes it is time for parliament to tackle the ever burgeoning and convoluted mechanism for growing the governmental Leviathan and redistributing wealth. What modern social states like Britain and France and even the United States fail to grasp is that one must create wealth before you can re-distribute it.

Some argue that since paying taxes, by sheer definition, is inherently unfair, then the net should be cast wide to speed the pain equally. In other words, taxing or creating fees, surcharges, tariffs or levies for everything from income to interest earned from a bank account or building society; from tobacco and alcohol to bread and cheese; and from corporation tax to inheritance (death) tax.

The UK saw its highest tax rate in 1966, when the Labour government of Harold Wilson ushered in a 134.25% tax rate. This outraged George Harrison of The Beatles, who was affected the 95% super-income tax bracket, that he composed the music and lyrics for the ‘Taxman’, as a form of revolt. The Beatles band recorded the song in April and it was released in the album, ‘Revolver’ in August 1966.

 Tolly's UK Yellow Tax Handbook 2010 being burnt in protest
Many criticise the Thatcher-Major era as being ‘soft’ on taxing the rich and giving away government assets to private industry. The critics fail to acknowledge the quantitative data. The highest income tax bracket was 98%. Stated differently, for every £1 a person earned, 98p was going to the government. Today, the highest income tax bracket is 50%, which took effect in assessment year 2010 and catches individuals earning over £150,000 per annum. Under the New Labour government of Tony Blair, much of the neoliberalist economic policies of the Thatcher-Major governments were continued. This led Labour MP, Peter Mandelson to coin the term “Neo-Thatcherism” to describe the economic policies of New Labour.

Neoliberalism is a school of modern political theory which stresses market-driven approaches to economic and social policy, based on neoclassical theories of economics, which advocates efficiency of private enterprise, liberalization of free trade and open markets, and encouraging consumer free choice, individual thinking, and private enterprise. The tenets have frequently been a topic of conversation at Bohemian Grove. The ‘Washington Consensus’ is considered the theory’s definitive statement. International organizations such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and World Trade Organization, along with regional trade associations such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the Southern Common Market (MERCOSUR), and the European Union (EU) have endorsed the general principles of the theory.

National tax policy should encourage innovation and efficiency. Jobs must be created, at the core is build and maintain a strong and vibrant middle class, which broadens the tax base and brings stability to volatile global markets. The UK tax statutes are so complicated that while everyone in society gets caught by the tax ‘net’ burden, the lofty weight of a growing public sector places high demands to grow the public coffers. Government must learn to do more with less. A focus should be on prioritization of national policy objectives and efficiency placed at the heart of society’s vision and mission. An athlete performs best when he/she is in lean and well trained. Likewise, a government who learns to operate on less is able to understand the benefit of competition and getting quality.

One of the most efficient governmental organizations is the EU, which operates on a relatively small budget and meagre staff, yet the data they produce is unprecedented when comparing to national governments. An example is a student who is living on a shoe string budget is able to do far more than a professional paid a monthly salary. Why? The student understands the value of every pound-sterling and looks for the cheapest option (eg- riding the bus as opposed to the train, sleeping in a hostel compared to a 5-star hotel, et cetera et cetera). If governments operated in the same manner, more money would be in the hands of the private sector to grow the economy and allow citizens more options with how to live their lives.

In protest of the UK’s and US's confusing and convoluted tax policy, I took part in a tax act protest, where students burned their tax statutes in protest. Please join me in supporting a simplification of the tax statutes - the first step towards creating a more just British or American society.

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