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View Full Version : The 80 tax rises under Labour



ShadesWolf
06-06-2006, 19:42
Now try and tell me im better off under a labour government.


If you feel poorer under Labour, here's the reason why. Since 1997, Gordon Brown has presided over 80 different tax rises - all of which are listed here.

As a result of those increases, Tax Freedom Day - the day when you stop working for the Inland Revenue and start earning for yourself - fell on Saturday, June 3 this year. In 1997, it was May 25. Yet Mr Brown still inists he's a tax-cutting Chancellor.

1997


1. Council tax up 6.5 per cent to Band D average of £688
2. Mortgage tax relief cut from 15 per cent to 10 per cent, saving Chancellor £800million-a-year
3. £5billion-a-year tax grab on retirement savings by scrapping dividend tax credits for pension funds
4. Private medical insurance tax relief for pensioners abolished
5. Health insurance taxed again
6. Fuel tax escalator up, leading to inflation-busting rises on petrol prices
7. Vehicle excise duty up
8. Tobacco duty escalator up (as fuel)
9. Stamp duty increased on properties over £250,000
10. Corporation tax changes
11. Windfall tax on privatised utilities, designed to raise £5.2billion


1998


12. Married couples' allowance cut from 15 per cent to 10 per cent from April 1999
13. Tax on travel insurance up
14. Tax on casinos and gaming machines up
15. Fuel tax escalator brought forward
16. Tax on company cars increased
17. Tax relief for foreign earnings abolished
18. Tax concession for certain professions abolished
19. Capital gains tax imposed on certain non-residents
20. Reinvestment relief restricted
21. Corporation tax payments brought forward
22. Stamp duty on properties increased again
23. Some petrol and oil duties raised
24. Additional diesel duties
25. Landfill tax up, from £7 to £10 per ton 26. Council tax up by 8.6 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £747


1999


27. Upper earnings limit for National Insurance contributions raised above inflation
28. National Insurance for self-employed people raised
29. Married couple's allowance abolished from 2000 for under-65s
30. Mortgage interest relief abolished from April 2000, increasing typical bill for average homeowner by £240-a-year
31. New rules to stop contractors in IT industry setting up firms to reduce their tax bills
32. High mileage discount for company cars cut
33. Tobacco duty escalator brought forward
34. Insurance premium tax up from one to five per cent
35. Vocational training relief abolished
36. Employer's National Insurance contributions extended to all benefits-in-kind
37. VAT on some banking services increased
38. Premiums paid to tenants by landlords taxed
39. Duty on minor oils, such as fuel oil, up
40. Vehicle excise duties for lorries up
41. Landfill tax escalator introduced
42. Stamp duty on properties increased again
43. Council tax up by 6.7 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £798


2000


44. Tobacco duties up by five per cent above inflation
45. Stamp duty on properties increased again
46. Extra taxation of life assurance companies
47. Rules extended on companies using foreign subsidiaries to shelter profits in low tax regime
48. Council tax up by 6.1 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £847


2001


49. Council tax up by 6.4 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £901


2002


50. Personal allowances for everybody under the age of 65 frozen
51. National Insurance rate to rise from 10 per cent to 11 per cent from April 2003
52. New NI band for higher earners
53. National Insurance for employers rises from 11 per cent to 12 per cent
54. Self-employed also rises by 1 per cent
55. North Sea taxation up
56. Tax on some alcoholic drinks up
57. New stamp duty regime aimed at stamping out tax avoidance
58. New rules on loan relationships
59. Council tax up by 8.2 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £976


2003


60. VAT on electronically supplied services
61. IR35 applied to domestic workers to stop families from reducing tax bills on nannies
62. Betting duty change
63. Tax on red diesel and fuel oil up
64. Rules extended on companies using foreign subsidiaries to shelter profits in low tax regime extended to Ireland
65. Vehicle excise duty up by £5 on cars and vans
66. Council tax up by 12.9 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,102


2004


67. New 19 per cent tax rate for owner-managed businesses
68. Six-fold increase in the amount of tax paid by tradesmen for using their vans outside working hours. For basic rate tax-paters, an annual rise of £110 to £660
69. UK transfer pricing introduced, substantially increasing red tape on British firms
70. Increase in rate of tax on discretionary trusts becomes 40 per cent
71. Increase in tax on red diesel fuel
72. Increase in tax on red diesel fuels, including LPG (liquid petroleum gas)
73. Council tax up by 5.9 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,167


2005


74. Cancellation of stamp duty land tax relief on disadvantaged areas
75. Tax on North Sea oil firms doubled from 10 per cent to 20 per cent
75. Tax on North Sea oil firms doubled from 10 per cent to 20 per cent
76. 0 per cent rate of corporation tax abolished which had been introduced by Mr Brown to encourage small businesses
77. Council tax up by 4.1 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,214


2006


78. Clampdown on trusts and insurance policies commonly used to cut future inheritance bills
79. Increase of £45 in vehicle excise duty for gas-guzzling 4x4s cars
80. Council tax up by 4.5 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,268


Source: Grant Thornton, Institute for Fiscal Studies and Conservative party

The years refer to when the taxes were announced but not necessarily when they were introduced. In addition to these rises the Chancellor has increased his take by dragging more and more income tax payers into the 40 per cent bracket by consistently limiting rises in allowances and top rate thresholds.

ShadesWolf
06-06-2006, 19:47
I will comment on one of these

1997 - 1. Council tax up 6.5 per cent to Band D average of £688
1998 - 26. Council tax up by 8.6 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £747
1999 - 43. Council tax up by 6.7 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £798
2000 - 48. Council tax up by 6.1 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £847
2001 - 49. Council tax up by 6.4 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £901
2002 - 59. Council tax up by 8.2 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £976
2003 - 66. Council tax up by 12.9 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,102
2004 - 73. Council tax up by 5.9 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,167
2005 - 77. Council tax up by 4.1 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,214
2006 - 80. Council tax up by 4.5 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,268

And the left wing muppets wonder why I hate LABOUR

I will give u one word TAX.

rory_20_uk
06-06-2006, 20:04
And it goes on such things as throwing money at the NHS. There are managers that work at night to tell the doctors off for not working hard enough. Possibly enploying another doctor was out of the question? There are about 10,000 unemployed doctors in the UK at the moment (I'm one of them)

The civil service grows like some sort of cancer year on year. And since slimming down this behomoth would fall to the Civil service to undertake it never quite seems to happen...

I don't want government help to do things. I want to earn my money to do with as I wish, not as some committee thinks it should be spent after taking their salaries from the pot, as well as everyone who then has to organise the new Department of Paperclip Counting. :furious3:

~:smoking:

ShadesWolf
06-06-2006, 20:28
And it goes on such things as throwing money at the NHS. There are managers that work at night to tell the doctors off for not working hard enough. Possibly enploying another doctor was out of the question? There are about 10,000 unemployed doctors in the UK at the moment (I'm one of them)


~:smoking:

But of course we would all rather be operated on by a pencil pusher than a doctor. But at least the unemployed level is down

Or is this Gordon's answer to the pensions crisis, let the clerks operate and we all die, hence no pension problem.

My local hospital spend lots on some new scanners, only to twelve months later close the operation. What a waste of money. My father comes home with story after story, hospitals are scary places

InsaneApache
06-06-2006, 22:04
Well I had to resort to type and bite at this. Oh! I'm sorry, according to Jag the government has it's own money. Not taxpayers money. So that's alright then.

I have told younger people 'til I'm almost blue in the face. Labour will rob you blind. Time and time again. Especially the working classes. I know, I'm working class and they took over 50% of my wages under Callaghan...then they throw it away, because they aren't working class, they are upper-middle class 'champaign socialists' and the last time they got there hands dirty was when they slipped on their gravel drive opening the Jag.

Still, as I obviously have a shame from being a northener with a french fry on my collarbone, what response would you expect? :laugh4:

ShadesWolf
06-07-2006, 06:12
:laugh4:

Ice
06-07-2006, 07:05
I don't want government help to do things. I want to earn my money to do with as I wish, not as some committee thinks it should be spent after taking their salaries from the pot, as well as everyone who then has to organise the new Department of Paperclip Counting. :furious3:

~:smoking:

:yes:

I'm glad we agree.

Tribesman
06-07-2006, 07:50
As a result of those increases, Tax Freedom Day - the day when you stop working for the Inland Revenue and start earning for yourself - fell on Saturday, June 3 this year. In 1997, it was May 25. Yet Mr Brown still inists he's a tax-cutting Chancellor.

Thats wierd , since for 9 consecutive years under the tories tax freedom day was a lot later than June 3 wasn't it .

I will comment on one of these

1997 - 1. Council tax up 6.5 per cent to Band D average of £688
1998 - 26. Council tax up by 8.6 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £747
1999 - 43. Council tax up by 6.7 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £798
2000 - 48. Council tax up by 6.1 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £847
2001 - 49. Council tax up by 6.4 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £901
2002 - 59. Council tax up by 8.2 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £976
2003 - 66. Council tax up by 12.9 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,102
2004 - 73. Council tax up by 5.9 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,167
2005 - 77. Council tax up by 4.1 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,214
2006 - 80. Council tax up by 4.5 per cent for average bill on Band D property to £1,268

Thats even stranger the larger the increase seems to be directly related to the reduction in central government subsidies for local authoruty , who would have thought that reducing the allocation of central tax revenue subsidising local authorities would = an increase in the burden on local tax collection .:dizzy2:
Whatever next ? pehaps the startling revelation that a reduction in income tax was financed by a doubling of sales tax .:juggle2:

Incongruous
06-07-2006, 11:31
But you do agree that the Labour government is run by Tories.

Tribesman
06-07-2006, 14:21
But you do agree that the Labour government is run by Tories.
Yep , New Labour is ThacherLite .:laugh4:
But do you notice the things listed in Shades 80 tax rises ?
Would you careto guess how many conservative budgets didn't contain tax increases identical to those listed , you know , vehicle exise , local tax increases , fuel exise , alcohol tax , tobacco tax , insurance tax , investment tax , it does make his liat look like a load of bollox , what makes the list even more of a pile of tripe is that it seperately lists the same tax changes in the same years as seperate articles .....I suppose that was neccesary to make it up to a nice round number :laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4:

Incongruous
06-08-2006, 06:21
Lol

But still I really see no real difference in either party now.
Do you?

Tribesman
06-10-2006, 07:19
So instead this money (which shouldn't have been taken in the first place) gets spent on crap you probably don't want, like crappy state healthcare, and the war in Iraq.

But what do I know? I'm a stinky American.

Is it time for a new American revolution GC ?
The old rallying call of "no taxation without representation " will have to be changed to "no taxation"