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UK property taxes soar past £80bn for the first time | UK property taxes soar past £80bn for the first time |
(about 1 hour later) | |
UK residents are paying higher property taxes than anywhere else in the developed world, with receipts soaring past £80bn for the first time. | UK residents are paying higher property taxes than anywhere else in the developed world, with receipts soaring past £80bn for the first time. |
In news that won’t come as much of a surprise to homeowners and businesses alike, new research has revealed that the UK has the highest property taxes in the world both as a percentage of GDP and overall taxation. | In news that won’t come as much of a surprise to homeowners and businesses alike, new research has revealed that the UK has the highest property taxes in the world both as a percentage of GDP and overall taxation. |
Analysis of OECD data shows that taxes on residential and commercial property, inheritance tax and business rates jumped to £81.4bn in 2016, up from £76.6bn the previous year. | |
This means revenue receipts for property taxes have gone up by £19.9bn since 2010. | This means revenue receipts for property taxes have gone up by £19.9bn since 2010. |
Britain’s property taxes as a percentage of overall taxes were 12.5 per cent in 2016 – more than double the OECD average of 6 per cent. | Britain’s property taxes as a percentage of overall taxes were 12.5 per cent in 2016 – more than double the OECD average of 6 per cent. |
This puts it ahead of countries including South Korea (12.3 per cent), Canada (11.8 per cent) and Australia (10.7 per cent). | |
Property taxes are the equivalent are of 4.1 per cent of GDP in the UK, higher than France at 4.0 per cent and Canada at 3.8 per cent. | Property taxes are the equivalent are of 4.1 per cent of GDP in the UK, higher than France at 4.0 per cent and Canada at 3.8 per cent. |
In last week’s Budget, the Government announced that it was scrapping stamp duty for first-time buyers on properties worth up to £300,000 as well as curbing rises in business rates. | In last week’s Budget, the Government announced that it was scrapping stamp duty for first-time buyers on properties worth up to £300,000 as well as curbing rises in business rates. |
Alex Probyn, president of UK business rates at Altus Group, said: “Last Wednesday’s Budget sees some property taxes starting to go back in the right direction, which is encouraging. | |
“Comparing revenue forecasts from the spring and the Autumn Budgets show tax receipts from both stamp duty and business rates falling £9.5bn over the next five years, which is a positive. | |
“There’s no denying the attractiveness of property taxes for Government. Collection rates are high and they are increasingly hard to avoid. A building is harder to hide than a profit.” | “There’s no denying the attractiveness of property taxes for Government. Collection rates are high and they are increasingly hard to avoid. A building is harder to hide than a profit.” |
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