You don't want to abolish the state pension? You don't want all social provision to be means-tested?Concocts garbage not in evidence.
But well-poisoning and propagation of your personal fantasy noted.
You don't want to abolish the state pension? You don't want all social provision to be means-tested?Concocts garbage not in evidence.
But well-poisoning and propagation of your personal fantasy noted.
What?After just having lectured me on the fact that the rate can rise and the take can fall [ . . . ]
What?
I am sure yiu still do maintain that. People don't tend to relinquish their position even if it does not stand up well to forensics.After all of that, I still maintain that either the centre is shifting to the right (driven, and this is simply my opinion, by powerful corporate and media interests) or the will of the people is not being reflected in the legislation.
There are myriad tax rates. There is only one tax take.Ah, My apologies, that was Mike. I am told the difference between 'rate' and 'take' is important so could you rephrase the question.
I am sure yiu still do maintain that. People don't tend to relinquish their position even if it does not stand up well to forensics.
(Neither do I of course. But on this point I don't think the centre has moved in aggregate. More liberal in a lot of ways but also less liberal on things like immigration. Larger state but also more private provision. As for the interests driving it then I don't think big business is the only interest with power at all)
There are myriad tax rates. There is only one tax take.
Which one is your indicator of left/right please?
I have asked before, because I'm interested. Why do you support immigration? I have no problems with it either, but you seem really to be an enthusiast for it, and it would interest me to know why you have adopted that position.I am sure yiu still do maintain that. People don't tend to relinquish their position even if it does not stand up well to forensics.
(Neither do I of course. But on this point I don't think the centre has moved in aggregate. More liberal in a lot of ways but also less liberal on things like immigration. Larger state but also more private provision. As for the interests driving it then I don't think big business is the only interest with power at all)
Relinquish my position very easily even if it doesn't stand up to forensics.neither do you what..?
Then it is inconsistent to say that a growing size of government (tax take, or total spend) "could easily be a shift right". This is more likely to be a shift left isn't it?So, generally speaking, and as I understand it, higher tax rates are a more left wing thing and lower tax rates a more right wing thing.
Relinquish my position very easily even if it doesn't stand up to forensics.
Then it is inconsistent to say that a growing size of government (tax take, or total spend) "could easily be a shift right". This is more likely to be a shift left isn't it?
Tax revenue as % national income, public spending as % of national spending.
Many things are possible it is not very likely.If the population rises and the tax rate falls, is it possible to have a lowering rate with a rising take?
Also, what are the income-egalitarian ("left") grounds for making government payments to rich people, again?
Many things are possible it is not very likely.
A growing share of the economy being government spending and/or government revenue (tax, excise, other) is not really consistent with there being a shift of the centre-ground to the right is it? At least not given your statement that the right cuts taxes. (And I suppose you would add, cuts spending)
I mentioned universal benefits and all those I listed are payments. I stated removing this universality was incompatible with "a move right". You disagreed.Payments? Have I mentioned payments?
There seems to be an almost world-wide false idea that universal state benefits are somehow progressive / left and that reserving state benefits for the poor only is regressive. It is completely backwards. There is no income-egalitatarian justification for rich people to receive free prescriptions, or state pension, or winter fuel payment, or child benefit, or any benefit at all. I disagree that the withdrawal of universal benefits is a move to the right.
I disagree with your disagreement.
You load caveats onto one comprehensive measure (the size of the state), but are perfectly happy to conclude that a falling headline business tax rate is a rightward shift of the centre ground.I think it's probably not that simple.