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Tax kills

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Cornwall-based Worldwide Financial Planning speaks about how taxes are used

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Worldwide Financial Planning(Image: © Richard Trainor)

It was ‘death by taxes’ last week, and a nod of the head to all the secondary charges we never had before (city car parking, hospital car park charges, council tax et al).

Taxes are not the problem, as shown in a survey demonstrating that over two thirds of us would pay more tax to ensure a fully functioning NHS. What is wrong and narks most, is how the taxes are used, oh, and all those corporations and high net worth individuals who don’t pay tax. Bless ‘em.

Hands on his banister, William Pitt the Younger (that’s a mouthful) introduced income tax to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ in 1799. At a rate of less than one per cent, it was to pay for the Napoleonic wars.

It was stopped and started again a few times but made permanent in 1842.

Today, it’s mainstream in many countries but not all. There are many countries like the UAE which do not charge income tax, instead charging either corporations, tourists, revenue on the production of oil and other such products. Many of these countries do not have large defence costs and so can function very well indeed on their income.

In the West, the numbers swing, with the onus applying to individuals, while many corporates and private individuals do not pay tax at the same rate as everyone else.

Amazon’s main º£½ÇÊÓÆµ division benefits from a ‘super-deduction scheme’ introduced by Rishi Sunak as chancellor, that allowed them to pay no tax on £222m of pre-tax profits last year. Indeed, it actually booked a credit for tax under the scheme in 2021.

Aside from that project, there is also a study which shows that countries are on course to lose over $5trillion in tax over the next 10 years to both wealthy individuals and corporations that use tax havens.