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Labour would bring back 50p tax rate | Labour would bring back 50p tax rate |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Labour would reintroduce the 50p top rate of income tax for those earning over £150,000, if it returns to power, the shadow chancellor has said. | Labour would reintroduce the 50p top rate of income tax for those earning over £150,000, if it returns to power, the shadow chancellor has said. |
Ed Balls said a government analysis which showed it did not raise much was skewed by ministers' assumptions. | Ed Balls said a government analysis which showed it did not raise much was skewed by ministers' assumptions. |
The previous Labour government created a new 50% tax band in 2010 for anyone with income of more than £150,000, but the coalition cut it to 45% last April. | |
Conservatives said an increase would put "the economic recovery at risk". | |
And some business leaders echoed that warning. | |
Speaking to the Fabian Society in central London, Mr Balls said: "When the deficit is still high, it cannot be right for David Cameron and George Osborne to have chosen to give the richest people in the country a huge tax cut." | Speaking to the Fabian Society in central London, Mr Balls said: "When the deficit is still high, it cannot be right for David Cameron and George Osborne to have chosen to give the richest people in the country a huge tax cut." |
He said Labour wanted to finish the job of getting the deficit down by "reversing this unfair tax cut for the richest 1% of people in the country". | |
Other Labour pledges Mr Balls highlighted in his speech included: | Other Labour pledges Mr Balls highlighted in his speech included: |
Mr Balls also announced a Labour government would balance the books and deliver a budget surplus as well as passing a law to ensure it adheres to "tough" and binding fiscal rules, he said. | Mr Balls also announced a Labour government would balance the books and deliver a budget surplus as well as passing a law to ensure it adheres to "tough" and binding fiscal rules, he said. |
This would mean eliminating the deficit and cutting debt as a share of GDP between 2015 and 2020. | This would mean eliminating the deficit and cutting debt as a share of GDP between 2015 and 2020. |
Labour's commitment does not include borrowing extra money for long-term investments, such as the HS2 high-speed rail link. | |
Revenue row | |
The government said its decision to cut the top income tax rate to 45p had reduced Treasury income by £100m a year - a figure based on a 2012 assessment by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC). | |
But Mr Balls said the latest HMRC figures showed the 50p rate had raised "almost £10bn more in tax" in the three years it was in place than was suggested by the 2012 assessment. | |
Conservative Treasury minister David Gauke said he stood by the 2012 assessment and insisted the 50p rate would "raise little, if anything". | |
He added: "If Labour want to deliver a reduced deficit, given their opposition to any of the spending cuts we're putting in place, then I'm afraid they're just going to have to put up taxes on everyone - not just the top earners." | He added: "If Labour want to deliver a reduced deficit, given their opposition to any of the spending cuts we're putting in place, then I'm afraid they're just going to have to put up taxes on everyone - not just the top earners." |
Liberal Democrat Chief Secretary to the Treasury Danny Alexander accused Labour of "breathtaking" hypocrisy. | |
He said bringing back the 50p tax rate would not fix a "system full of loopholes" which Labour left behind in 2010. | |
Lord Myners - a former Labour City minister under Gordon Brown - said it was "not clear" how the tax would help the UK "compete with the world's growth economies". | |
"We need to encourage productive enterprise and effort rather than resort to predatory taxation," he said. | |
Government 'complacency' | |
The Unite union called Mr Balls' 50p tax plan a sign that Labour "understands the need for a fairer taxation system". | |
A spokesman said: "This is a beginning. Voters will know now Labour is emerging as a positive choice for this country. | A spokesman said: "This is a beginning. Voters will know now Labour is emerging as a positive choice for this country. |
"Contrast this move with the complacency of the government, which instead of finding ways to get money into people's pockets, insists to cash-strapped workers everything is rosy." | "Contrast this move with the complacency of the government, which instead of finding ways to get money into people's pockets, insists to cash-strapped workers everything is rosy." |
But Katja Hall, chief policy director of the CBI, warned that a 50p tax rate would put talented people off coming to the UK to invest and create jobs. | But Katja Hall, chief policy director of the CBI, warned that a 50p tax rate would put talented people off coming to the UK to invest and create jobs. |
Simon Walker, director general of the Institute of Directors, said Labour needed to drop its practice of "knee-jerk reversion to the old socialist nostrums that so damaged Britain's economy in the past". | |
"It was, and remains, an envy-driven political gesture designed solely to drive a wedge between voters," he added. | "It was, and remains, an envy-driven political gesture designed solely to drive a wedge between voters," he added. |
Sir Stuart Rose, chairman of Ocado, said: "This will put at risk all the good work that has been done to put the economy back on track." |