Tag: public services

  • I Don’t Do Gift Aid Anymore

     This is also why you pay taxes, for the authorities are God’s servants, who give their full time to governing. Give to everyone what you owe them: If you owe taxes, pay taxes; if revenue, then revenue; if respect, then respect; if honour, then honour.

    Romans 13:6-7

    We are in the fortunate position of being able to make donations to various charities. Of course, we give to our church and have always Gift Aided it, but we also try to support other causes. Lately, I have ceased ticking the Gift Aid box on the donation forms. Gift Aid is an option to include the tax that you would have paid on the donation so that instead of going to the government it goes to the charity. It occurred to me that the more we Gift Aided, the less of our taxes would be retained by the government and, hence, less would be available to fund public services. At a time when all our public services are financially compromised the government needs all the taxes it can get to keep them going! So, I have stopped adding Gift Aid to our donations.

    We need a different national conversation around tax. Our major political parties are locked into a “reduce taxes at all costs” paradigm. As a result, we see our public services crumbling and the government constantly finding new ways to increase tax revenue without appearing to do so. Consequently, our tax system is unfair, unbalanced, and inadequate. And it is opaque in the extreme! Certain sections of the media will stridently trumpet the historically high rates of taxation we are experiencing but (with the exception of one or two bodies) fail to point out that our taxation is no heavier than the average of similar European countries even at these historically high rates. The only winners of our tax system are the extremely wealthy.

    Our politicians treat us as children believing that we cannot hold an intelligent and mature conversation about the cost of public services and the amount of tax that needs to be raised in order to have good public services. They believe that we can be fobbed-off with constant reductions in general taxation and not make the connection with failing public services. Taxes have to rise and the extremely wealthy have to pay more in taxes.  This has to be done openly and transparently (i.e. income tax) and not through Faustian mechanisms designed to obfuscate and deceive. Of course, restoring public services and improving public services after years of deliberate financial starvation in order to fund tax-cuts cannot be done overnight. The Junior Doctors’ dispute is testament to that – restoring a 35% cumulative loss in pay is not feasible overnight but the present government, dogmatically wedded to reducing taxes, cannot provide a long term path to restoration that  might resolve the dispute.  But will the Labour Party, Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves in particular, be bold enough to grasp the nettle and start to talk honestly about taxation and the cost of restoring public services? So far, the signs are not encouraging.

  • The Emperor Has No Clothes On!

    For the same reason you also pay taxes, for the authorities are God’s servants, busy with this very thing.

    Romans 13:6

    We are in election season and the recent by-elections appear to be good news for the Labour Party. The Conservative (Tory) Party is, arguably, the most successful political party in the world in the modern era, which, when you come to think about it, is surprising! How is it that so many people have had the wool pulled over their eyes for so long?  The Tory boast is that they are the party of economic competence and it is the stick with which they regularly beat the heads of the Labour Party, and people are convinced. How do they do that? It seems to me that it is a very modern example of the Emperor has no clothes on!

    The fundamental dogma of the Tories is that taxes should always be reduced, nothing else is as important as this. Never has this been more clearly demonstrated than in the debacle of Liz Truss’s short-lived premiership. But it continues to be demonstrated in the present Chancellor’s teasing of tax-cuts, all-be-it far less dramatic, for the coming election. The cutting of taxes is the be-all-and-end-all of Tory economic policy.  But if you only, and continually, cut taxes then where is the money coming from to pay for schools, hospitals, roads, railways etc.? The Tories appear to have three answers to this: first, grow the economy; and then, in the meantime, spend less  and  borrow more – borrowing is at its highest since World War 2. It is an inevitable consequence of the latter two that public services will, in the end, deteriorate as less and less money (in real terms) is made available to public services and more and more money is needed to pay the interest on loans. The first is interesting in that it is essentially a religious response, a prayer to the god of economics! And who knows how that will work!? So, we see huge waiting times across the NHS; literally crumbling infrastructure in our schools; increasing backlogs in the courts, fewer and fewer lawyers willing to do legal aid work; not enough housing for the population; social care that is all but non-existent, an antiquated public transport system, armed forces not fit for purpose, more and more people turning to food banks – the list goes on!

    Economic competence is about ensuring that all the services required to maintain a healthy modern social order are present and work well. This is exactly what the Tories have failed to do and this is not an accident but the inevitable consequence of a fundamental dogma that taxes must only be reduced, never increased. The Tories appear to have convinced the British public that they are competent by reducing their headline taxes. But they have failed to ensure effective public services in every area of life. The Emperor really has no clothes on!  

    Does this mean that the Labour Party has it all figured out? Watch this space ….!