Wes Streeting has called for a massive hike in Capital Gains Tax as part of his pitch for the leadership. Or the highest office possible under Burnham…
Streeting complained to the BBC’s Political Thinking podcast about the tax system and proposed a “wealth tax that works“:
“A member of my family is a cleaner in Lancashire. She pays a higher tax rate on her salary than her landlord pays for the growing value of the home she lives in. She slogs her guts out, he puts in far less effort, yet the state rewards him more than her. And we wonder why people are angry.
The system is penalising work. It’s not fair and it’s bad for our economy. We need a wealth tax that works. A pound made from simply owning assets should not be taxed less than a pound made from a hard day’s work. We can do it in a way that is pro-growth, pro-entrepreneur and pro-work.”
The former Health Secretary, who gave his resignation speech in the Commons yesterday, has misunderstood capital gains, which are not income. International evidence (and UK evidence) shows that when CGT rates go up revenues go down…
Streeting’s proposal is for capital gains tax rates to match the three bands of income tax – 20%, 40%, 45%. “Under the proposal, a person’s capital gains tax band would be calculated by adding up their income and profits from assets.” If the tax rate was 40%, then an increase from 24% to 40% would be a 66.7% increase and an increase from 24% to 45% would be an 87.5% increase. Streeting relies on a paper by the architect of the now-discredited Farm Tax which claims £14 billion could be raised…
HMRC’s own calculations show that increasing higher Capital Gains Tax rate by 10 percentage points (a 21% increase in the rate) would actually reduce revenue by £3.5 billion. A 5% increase would reduce it by £870 million. Increasing the lower rate also reduces revenues – the relatively modest CGT rises that have already taken place have resulted in significant lost revenue…
The latest HMRC stats from 2023-4 shows that the average gain per CGT taxpayer was about £174,000 in a year. That means the 45% tax rate in the majority of cases, which according to HMRC forecasts predicts a £7 billion loss in tax revenue…
With three exceptions European countries tax capital gains at substantially lower levels than income. Those three all tax them at between 20% and 10%…
Streeting has proposed this idea before in a pamphlet which seems to represent the last time he thought about policy. The ‘Labour Growth Group’ has mostly copied Farm Tax creator Arun Advani’s proposals in their own paper. Pop that in the bin…
Guido also called this at the beginning of the month. Tomorrow’s news, today…
Paula Barker, Liverpool Wavertree MP backing Andy Burnham, told Times Radio there wouldn’t be trouble from the markets under Burnham:
“The markets will have to fall in line.”