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Economics and Business Exchange Supported by Deloitte. Trends in the structure and impact of the UK tax system Howard Reed Economics & Business Exchange 13 June 2006 Outline • • • • The overall tax burden Distributional impacts Structural trends Future trends? The extent of taxation total tax as share of GDP 55 50 UK OECD average EU-15 US Japan Canada Sweden 45 40 35 30 25 20 2002 2000 1998 1996 1994 1992 1990 1988 1986 1984 year Source: OECD Does the tax “burden” matter? • Macro evidence shows little obvious correlation between tax (or spending) levels and GDP growth) • Microeconomic theory suggests taxes can create distortions and reduce efficiency • …but can also correct market failures • Depends how the money’s spent • Equity and efficiency objectives Tax share vs GDP growth, 1995-2005, OECD countries Tax take and economic growth, OECD countries, 1995-2004 Real economic growth (average % per annum) 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 total tax receipts as % of GDP Source: OECD 60 Distributional effects of tax system Key definitions: • A proportional tax takes the same proportion of income from all households (or :families, individuals) • A progressive tax takes a larger proportion from richer households than poorer • A regressive tax takes a smaller proportion from richer households than poorer Distributional effects of tax system • Best recent work: John Hills, Inequality and the State (2004) • Distributional impact of tax system on weekly incomes: – – – – – – Income tax: progressive NICs: (mostly) progressive VAT: regressive Excise Duties: regressive Local taxation: regressive OVERALL: regressive for bottom 10% of distribution, proportional elsewhere Issues with distributional analysis • ‘snapshot’ vs. life cycle • Incidence (who really pays a tax?) • When transfers (benefits/ tax credits) are included, overall redistribution UK trends: 1970s-1990s Personal taxes (income tax & NICs) • Cuts in basic rate IT seen as popular since 1970s • Parallel rises in NICs (and other taxes…) • A false dichotomy? Indirect taxes • Big rises in VAT 1979 and 1992 • Fuel duty escalator – 1990s Corporate tax • Large reductions 1984-1999 UK trends since 1997 Personal taxes (income tax & NICs) • Continuation of the philosophy that rises in NICs are preferable to raising IT • Some redistribution (via NICs) but mainly via tax credit system Indirect taxes • Some new environmental taxes (e.g. Climate Change levy) • But fuel duty escalator ended, no major shift towards ‘green taxation’ Corporate tax • Stable since 1999 • Various micro measures – ‘fine tuning’ or ‘tinkering’? Recent UK trends: revenue shares 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% excise VAT property/local payroll employer NICs employee NICs corporate income Personal income 1975 1985 1995 2003 Source: OECD Recent international trends Personal taxes: • Decreasing number of marginal rates & bands • Decreasing top rates Corporate taxes: • Trend towards reductions in rates Future developments? • • • • • Overall tax (and spending) pressures Drive for ‘simplicity’ Flat tax? Corporate tax ‘race to the bottom’? The political dimension Overall tax pressures 20 10 /1 1 20 09 /1 0 20 08 /0 9 20 07 /0 8 20 06 /0 7 20 05 /0 6 42 41 40 39 38 37 20 04 /0 5 % of GDP HM Treasury estimates for tax as share of GDP: 2006-2011 financial year Source: HM Treasury,Budget 2006 Tax simplicity • Much criticism of increased complexity in tax system • Often relates to inherently complex areas (financial taxation, international corporate tax, etc) • But not always (e.g. corp tax micro-measures) • Also tax credit administrative problems • Obvious simplifications get ignored – Merge income tax and NICs? Flat tax • Flavour of the month last summer • A ‘flat tax’ does not necessarily mean a flat (or simple) tax system • Can separate marginal rate structure from simplification arguments • A ‘Trojan horse’ for tax cuts? • Seems to improve compliance more than work effort (World Bank/IFS research on Russia) The political debate Conservatives: ‘flatter, simpler, fairer’ • tax commission reports later this year Lib Dems: ‘Fairer, simpler, greener’ • cut basic rate income tax • No more 50p rate • shift to ‘green’ taxes Labour: key pledges on income tax Key future issues to be resolved: • Spending path from CSR07 • Longer term commitments (e.g. 10-year childcare strategy) • Tax competition (particularly corporate tax) Economics and Business Exchange Supported by Deloitte.