Generally speaking one of the quickest ways to reduce inequality, is a severe recession when the wealthiest in society with larger homes, and other assets such as collectables and stocks (in or out of a pension), fall more in value, and so significantly reducing their net worth.
But as we’ve found out, few of us are immune from the wider effects of a recession, so a perpetual recession might be some great 'leveller', but it would be most unwelcome by most of us.
How about those tricksy top 1% of the UK population, where if we could somehow tie them down, never mind ‘put them up against the wall’, we are led to think that confiscation will again settle all the wrongs in society and perpetually pay for everything the poorest in society need?
Well in the meantime, this nearly 300,000 citizens currently pay over 27% of all UK income tax raised – and in theory via VAT and other asset purchase e.g. 10% Property Tax on homes just below £1 million to £1.5 million - so they nowadays pay a lot of additional tax, on top of Income and National Insurance.
If more than one property is ‘wealth’, those buying properties to let, nowadays also pay an additional Property Tax surcharge – that may not just discourage new BTL investment, but get many who need capital growth should ever rents be fixed below future funding costs to sell up – but whether the UK is ready to lose a large amount of private sector rental housing supply at this moment, is another debate.
Companies that have been able to both move around, and hide taxable income from September this year, will find this dodgy practice a problem as the OECD measures to create ‘information exchanges’ a few years back to increase international transparency, go live, which is probably why many large corporations are moving/settling in low tax countries, as some big American corporations are doing here.
So there is pretty good evidence up to last year, that the rich are actually paying MORE tax,(with more to come via transparency) and at the other end of the scale, its more easily evident that the poorest workers are paying LESS tax._
“Nearly half of Britons pay no income tax as burden on rich increases”
“Almost half of Britons pay no income tax while the richest are now shouldering the biggest burden on record, a new analysis has found.”
“The Institute for Fiscal Studies said that the proportion of working-age adults who do not pay income tax has risen from 34.3 per cent to 43.8 per cent, equivalent to 30million people.”
So arguably while the rich might shoulder more taxes, isn’t there the age old problem of ‘diminishing returns’ as they are pushed into taking (legal) tax avoidance measures?