Media Coverage
3 April 2005 The Sunday Times
Let them tell us the naked truth about tax
Matthew Elliott is backing an attempt to make
MPs state clearly where they stand on ever-increasing
taxes by taking the pledge.
Lady Godiva famously rode her horse through the
streets of Coventry naked. What is less well known
is that she did it to cut tax. After appealing
to her husband to reduce the town’s oppressive
taxes, the count promised the countess to comply
with her wish on one condition: she must ride
through the town without clothes.
Taxpayer groups from across the country will
be taking slightly less drastic action this week
to achieve the same goal. A group called Tax Pledge
2005 is being launched to clarify a vital point
in the election: would your MP vote for or against
further tax rises?
Supported by the TaxPayers’ Alliance and IsItFair,
the campaign is asking candidates to sign a simple
tax pledge. It reads: “I pledge to the taxpayers
of my constituency and to the British public that,
if elected to the next parliament and except in
the event of a national emergency, I will vote
against all increases in tax rates unless accompanied
by an equal or greater reduction in the overall
tax burden within the same proposals.”
The campaign is launching at an apt time. Until
last week conventional wisdom was that tax rises
had not significantly dented the government’s
popularity because average household incomes after
tax and benefits had risen every year since the
recession of the early 1990s.
This notion was smashed with the publication
of official figures showing that average household
incomes fell for the first time in almost 15 years,
following Gordon Brown’s tax-raising 2002 budget.
Between 2002-3 and 2003-4 the average family income
dropped from £409 to £408 a week, or £52 in the
year. For high earners, the impact was more dramatic.
A couple with two earners and two children on
a combined income of £60,000 lost £841.25, or
1.9% of their income. The Institute for Fiscal
Studies (IFS) attributes the drop to the 1% increase
in National Insurance rates in the 2002 budget,
the decision to freeze personal allowances, and
council tax increases.
The government’s tax increases are hitting people’s
pockets and opinion polls show that people are
becoming more concerned about tax. However, people
are confused. Arguments over “£35 billion cuts”,
“66 tax rises” and “£10 billion black holes” are
ignored as people are turned off by politicians
bickering. The tax pledge campaign is designed
to clarify where candidates stand.
The responses of candidates to the pledge will
be noted on the website www.taxpledge.org.uk.
Candidates who want a higher tax burden will not
sign the pledge, but those who believe that the
burden is either sufficient or too high will,
hopefully, sign.
The idea is not new; taxpayer groups across the
world have long used it to identify taxpayer-friendly
candidates. The Taxpayer Protection Pledge was
introduced in the United States in 1986. We envisage
that the pledge will be monitored by independent
economic analysts. If a chancellor in the next
parliament, for example, wanted to shift the burden
of taxation from direct to indirect taxes or introduce
a flat tax, groups such as the IFS would calculate
what effect this would have. If it reduced the
tax burden or made no net change, MPs who had
signed the tax pledge could vote for it with a
clear conscience. Taxpayers will therefore be
able to judge politicians on the basis of such
impartial opinions.
There are taxpayer-friendly MPs in all the major
parties and we would encourage them to be bold
and show their constituents where they stand on
further rises. Paradoxically, there should be
no problem for Labour candidates. Brown insists
that although the total amount of money collected
in taxes will rise over the next parliament as
economic growth reaps higher receipts, no increase
in tax rates is required to meet his golden rule.
So far, Labour will not commit itself to not
raising tax rates. Tony Blair has guaranteed that
a re-elected Labour government would keep the
basic and top rates of income tax unchanged, but
this guarantee does not extend to National Insurance
contributions, income tax thresholds or other
taxes. For Labour to rebut the Conservative allegation
that it would introduce “third-term tax rises”,
its candidates should sign the pledge.
Liberal Democrat candidates will find it most
difficult. The party’s alternative budget contained
a series of tax cuts, including lifting the threshold
for stamp duty and cutting road tax for smaller
and cleaner vehicles, but also proposed several
tax rises. The introduction of a local income
tax would mean higher council tax bills for middle-class
families.
The Lib Dems are also proposing a 50% top rate
of income tax for those earning more than £100,000
a year. If the net effect of the Lib Dem proposals
was “fiscally neutral” — not increasing the overall
tax burden — then Charles Kennedy and his candidates
could sign the pledge. Unfortunately, according
to the IFS, taxes would be £4 billion higher in
2007-8 with Vince Cable as chancellor, compared
with a re-elected Labour government.
We are still hopeful, however, that some Lib
Dems will sign the pledge because it is for candidates,
not parties, to support.
As for the Conservatives, Michael Howard talks
about “66 tax rises” since 1997, but taxpayers
remember that he was a senior member of John Major’s
government that brought in “22 Tory tax rises”.
To give his attacks on Labour more credibility
he should pledge clearly that the Conservatives
will not increase tax rates should he become prime
minister. This is well within party policy because
the Tories have committed themselves to £4 billion
of tax cuts in their first budget. Conservative
candidates should therefore sign the pledge so
voters know precisely where they stand.
Tax will be one of the big issues in the general
election and voters should be able to ask their
candidates whether they have signed the tax pledge.
They deserve an unambiguous answer.
Matthew Elliott is chief executive of the Tax
Payers’ Alliance, the independent grassroots campaign
for lower taxes
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