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Labour Representation Committee
We will be posting regular blogs on this page. Please feel free to comment.
24 January 2008
What would you do with £8.8bn?
Andrew Fisher, Editor and Co-ordinator of LEAP, considers the National Insurance Contributions Bill.
The Government is taking its National Insurance Contributions Bill through the Commons to iron out the anomalous way in which tax rates and the national insurance (NI) ceiling do not coincide.
However, another anomaly is why there is a ceiling so that the wealthy only pay 1% NI on their higher earnings (over £40k approx). John McDonnell MP has tabled an amendment to this Bill to remove the NI ceiling so that everyone pays 11% NI on all their earnings over £100 per week.
This would only affect those earning over £40,000, and would mean an increase of around £19 per week for those on £50,000 salaries. To put this in context just 6.7% of the population earns £50,000 or more. For the over 90% or so of the population that don't earn such salaries there would be no effect on their take-home pay – but there could be changes in the public services on which they rely with the revenue it raises.
This change would raise £8.88bn in public revenue. So LEAP and the LRC are asking 'how would you spend £8.8bn?'
For children, we could increase child benefit for the eldest child by £14 per week, lifting an estimated 400,000 children out of poverty, and increase Government spending on childcare by 50% and all for just £8.3bn.
For pensioners, we could make personal care free for the elderly, double the winter fuel allowance (which would cover two-thirds of the average pensioner's fuel bills, immediately restore the link to earnings, and still have £4.8bn remaining to give an inflation busting rise in the basic state pension (to raise the basic state pension to the Pension Credit level, a longstanding policy of the LRC, would cost £21bn according to the DWP).
In housing, we could bring all council houses up to the decent homes standard (based on ODPM estimate of £7,000 per home) and still have £3bn to invest in new build. In health we could give the NHS budget a real terms increase of 10% and still have enough left over to halve prescription costs.
In education, we could remove all university fees, double Sure Start funding and give the education and universities budget a real terms increase of 10% - and with enough money left over to fund an additional 20,000 teachers.
We could double the amount the UK gives in aid (to over 1% of GDP), and still have enough left to give Iraq and Afghanistan £1bn each per year in reparations for the devastation we have brought on those countries.
A directly redistributive alternative would be to raise the income tax personal allowance by 20% - which would benefit any paying income tax by about £230 per year.
Email info@l-r-c.org.uk to let us know how you would spend £8.8bn or to ask us if we can cost any policies you'd like to see implemented? Post your ideas and comments below.
A version of this article first appeared in Labour Briefing
posted by John at
3 Comments:
said...
It just highlights what this Government could have done and hasn't. Raising the ceiling on NI is just one way of raising money. There's also all the money they're planning to waste on Trident, privatisation, rescuing Northern Rock.
I'd do the international stuff - we owe the Iraqis and Afghans after the trauma we've visited on those countries. I can't think of a better priority
26 January 2008 13:11
said...
I'm disabled, yes I know both the Tories and Labour have something against us, perhaps we live to long. I have been under a pathways to work area for years now, and believe me I've done everything I can to find work. I want to work, I'd love to become human again, and not have people ask me are you really disabled or you pretending, In the last year had a bloke urinate on me, I've had a women spit at me, I've been assaulted and the police said it seems hate crime for the disabled is on the way up, nothing was done.
Use some of the money to please find me work a real job any job, I've been on Tv twice, I've been on the radio twice talking about my life, My doctor say my condition is getting worse, you have made my life hell, now do something to put it right and find me a job.
26 January 2008 23:51
said...
I'm for the international option. As John writes in his book Another World is Possible, "half the world's population lives on less than $2 a day . . . what these stark figures mean in reality is that poverty kills 30,000 children every day. that is a death rate greater than even the worst genocide or wars in world history. Poverty is a killer, and yet it could easily be resolved. For every £1 the UK spends on international development, we spend £8 on the military."
All the domestic things are a priority - but nothing is such a priority, and we owe this.
28 January 2008 16:46
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