One might equally come to the conclusion that poorly paid people doing grunt work jobs,(the type without which society could not function) for minimum wage would be equally demotivated too, no?
But nobody is proposing to tax them at 50%.... Minimum wage is about £11k/year, you'd pay about 15% on that, inclusive of NI, the marginal rate is 31%.
And as someone above rightly pointed out, someone on a low/average wage doesn't have all that much, before or after tax, so they aren't really in a position to make lifestyle decisions to earn less, whereas if you earn £200k you certainly can.
And of course at the £150k+ level, you have rather more choices - share options, 4-day weeks, emigrating, non-dom, tax avoidance schemes.
Totally agree with Caitlin. I don't understand why some of the richest people in the world, and I include all those on £50k a year or more moan about tax. You have a fantastic life. Just pay it.
Why should they? Would you say that regardless of how much tax they paid? They may very well feel 'no, I'd rather not, thanks very much, I already pay tens of thousands in tax every year, I make my contribution already.'
And having lots of money does not mean you have a fantastic life at all, they might have a shit life, while the person working for minimum wage in the animal sancutary has a much richer and more enjoyable life. Obviously the rich bloke contributes more to pay for schools'n'hospitals, but that doesn't mean he's having a 'fantastic life'.
I remember when I was just below the 40% bracket, it was very galling to discover that my bonus wouldn't amount to nearly as much as I thought - not worth the effort.
PS. Re Ms. Moron, I wouldn't be surprised if she's saying one thing in public and doing another. Journalists, MPs and the like are notorious for this. Polly Toynbee sends her income through Personal Service Companies to reduce tax bills, and The Guardian is owned by a trust setup for tax avoidance purposes in 1932, and it actually got a £800k tax REBATE last year despite making £300 million in profit, something facilitated, inter alia, by Caymans Islands-based Special Purpose Vehicles. There are very very few companies or individuals who when faced with the reality of earning lots of money are happy to hand over great wads of it to the government. When Moron posts her tax returns online I'll take her more seriously.
PPS. The tax rate is actually worse just above £100k - 60%, or 61% on earned income - due to the removal of the personal allowance. I forgot that earlier - if income tax was flat at 20%, the £150k earner would actually pay 6.25 times more tax than the £30k earner.