Thanks for the link, it's very interesting. This document (linked on that site) is worth reading - recommending a one-off wealth tax to help pay for the Covid debt:Banquo wrote: ↑Mon Oct 31, 2022 9:12 amIts where you set the threshold then in your model, and how do you filter out earned wealth vs your 'unearned' definition- and btw these gains can be taxed either as inheritance tax or capital gains if not your home. To achieve your more targeted objective requires a pretty sophisticated set up I'd think?Son of Mathonwy wrote: ↑Sun Oct 30, 2022 7:06 pmWe have larger wealth inequality than income inequality, hence my thinking it's a problem. I agree it doesn't seem quite so worrying if the assets were all paid for through earnings, but a large part of asset values in the UK are from inflated land and property values (rather than earned), gains which are not taxed at all. And the really wealthy will shield their estates from inheritance tax via trusts and offshore company ownership, so wealth really builds up over generations.Stom wrote: ↑Sun Oct 30, 2022 10:37 am
I want to interject here, because I don't personally believe individually owned physical assets are a major problem. I, personally, don't see a wealth tax on property, cars, boats, etc., as being conductive to the type of society that I would want to build. Once someone has made their money, I think it's their money. My problem is with how they make that money.
I don't believe wealth should create wealth indefinitely, to the detriment of anyone who doesn't have wealth. And that's what it does right now, as companies beholden to stakeholders would rather slash budgets than pay employees more, hire more people, or spend more on creating better products or services that can have a positive impact on the world.
The massive corp. I work for are slashing budgets because of the RISK of REDUCED profit. Not because they're making a loss right now, or because there are any cash flow or budgetary issues. No, the cuts are because of shareholder panic over the value of their asset.
I would tax profit made on the stock market at higher than 50p.
I would levy a wealth tax on corporations sitting on money.
I would incentivise spending on research and payroll with tax breaks and payroll tax cuts.
I would look to introduce a large income tax - not profit tax - on any company that has an offshore entity. If there is no offshore entity, there's no need, the money will stay in the country.
I would probably raise both the top rate of tax AND the threshold. It should be at closer to 500,000...maybe that means introducing another tax band.
There are some very good benefits to starting business ideas in the UK already, but I would extend that, and also make it easier for non-residents. Small businesses are the backbone of an economy, so they need to be supported.
This situation is unstable. In time it will lead to smaller and smaller numbers owning an increasing proportion of all wealth, until we return to a feudal system OR have a revolution. Better to fix it now, gradually.
Here's a useful model I think (did my own homework for a change). I haven't checked the source
http://taxsimulator.ukwealth.tax/#/
https://www.wealthandpolicy.com/wp/Weal ... rt_FAQ.pdf
Re earned vs unearned wealth - sorry for any confusion - I was just saying that I can appreciate why it might seem more acceptable to tax unearned wealth. However I still think we should tax all (net) wealth, so there's no need to try to separate the two.
As per the linked doc above, there's something to be said for a one-off wealth tax vs annual. Nonetheless I would still want to have an annual one because I want this to have an ingoing impact (this is not a completely eccentric idea BTW, countries with wealth tax include Norway, France, Holland, Switzerland, Belgium and Argentina). Obviously a one-off wealth tax hit followed by a lower rate annual tax is an option.