Is Clegg’s tax threshold plan the best way to reduce income inequality?

Nick Clegg’s tax threshold plans go half way to addressing the problem of working poverty, but it goes no way towards addressing the cause.

 

Shelly Asquith – is a campaigns assistant at One Society

Nick Clegg’s call today to speed up the process of raising the tax threshold to £10,000 will lift one million people out of income tax. Clegg aims to reduce the UK’s excessive levels of income inequality, which should be welcomed, but there has always been controversy about whether this proposal is the best way to achieve that aim.

For example, as research (pdf) by Tim Horton and Howard Reed, published by Left Foot Forward before the general election found, of the £16.5 billion this policy is expected to cost, 94 per cent would go to those on middle to higher incomes – not those at the bottom.

Since then, the deputy prime minister has explored ways of reducing the extent to which the policy provides accidental benefits to those who least need it.

But some issues remain. While Clegg claims his move to push up the threshold will aid “alarm clock Britain” – his alias for Ed Miliband’s “squeezed middle” – it does little to address the hardship faced by those already earning less than the current threshold.

Overall, according to Horton and Reed, three million households in the poorest quartile of the income distribution would not benefit from this policy at all.

Another problem is that for many people, much of the positive impact of lower taxes will be clawed back (pdf) by reduced benefits. Many will see a reduction in their Income Support, Child Tax Credit and basic State pension allowances as a result of being lifted out of income tax.

Clegg’s proposal would increase the take-home incomes of a substantial number of families, but there may be more cost-efficient ways of achieving similar goals, which should also be considered.

Encouraging employers to pay a living wage, (or raising the national minimum wage), would lift many out of poverty. The government could also seek promote accessible training for, and incentives for employers to create, more skilled and semi-skilled jobs.

This would address the so-called ‘hollowing out of the labour market’ as well as mobilising many of those who find themselves stuck in unskilled, service sector jobs propped up by benefits.

Clegg’s solution goes half way to addressing the problem of working poverty, but it goes no way towards addressing the cause.

See also:

Lib Dems’ tax threshold policy robs Peter to pay PaulWill Straw, January 10th 2011

A Thatcherite horror sequelKen Livingstone, June 21st 2010

Clegg’s £10k tax allowance is no Tory concession; it’s a Tory dreamTim Horton and Howard Reed, May 12th 2010

Lib Dem tax policy “fails the fairness test”: IFS says so tooTim Horton and Howard Reed, April 29th 2010

Lib Dems: Our tax plans are fair and progressiveDanny Alexander, March 29th 2010

Lib Dem tax policy: Our response to your responsesTim Horton and Howard Reed, March 20th 2010

Lib Dem tax policy “fails the fairness test”Will Straw, March 13th 2010

40 Responses to “Is Clegg’s tax threshold plan the best way to reduce income inequality?”

  1. NeilCB1

    RT @leftfootfwd: Is Clegg’s tax threshold plan the best way to reduce income inequality? http://t.co/PfVTn5jm

  2. Ed's Talking Balls

    Even if I were to accept your analysis (which I don’t), the line ‘everyone benefits from this tax cut, not just the poor’ is objectionable, in my view. What of Miliband’s ‘squeezed middle’? Maybe they could do with some more cash in their pockets too in these times of high unemployment, stagnant wages and relatively high inflation.

  3. Newsbot9

    The lowest paid are already out of taxation.

    As usual, you’re after a tax break for the middle class and to screw over the poor.

  4. Newsbot9

    And when it’s funded (11+ billion cost!) from ALL tax payers, including the lowest paid, how precisely is hurting the poorer people going to increase spending? Oh wait, it’s not.

  5. Newsbot9

    The largest cost? Nope, the largest cost is rent. You don’t have the slightest concept of what being poor IS, let alone how people cope with it.

    And the ConDems have increased spending because of many of their ill-advised cuts, yes, which COST money.

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