National Insurance contributions

National Insurance contributions

Showing 61 – 80 of 151 results

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TAXBEN: The IFS tax and benefit microsimulation model

Resource

TAXBEN is the IFS’s tax and benefit microsimulation model, which calculates the impact of tax and benefit policy on households. It is used heavily in IFS’s work on the impacts of tax and benefit policy. This document gives a high level summary of TAXBEN, covering what policies and effects it does and does not include, and its limitations.

15 November 2017

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Taxes and redistribution

Presentation

This presentation was given at fringe events at the 2016 Party Conferences of Labour, the Conservatives and SNP.

26 October 2016

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Microsimulation in the UK: TAXBEN

Presentation

This presentation was given at a workshop on 'Microsimulation for fiscal policy analysis' held at the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission in Seville, Spain, on 23 September 2016.

23 September 2016

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Tax policy and inequality

Presentation

This presentation was delivered at a Treasury / HMRC tax policy school in London on 21st September 2016

21 September 2016

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Tax devolution & Wales: a primer

Presentation

Presentation given to the Welsh Assembly Finance Committee discussing the background to good tax design, tax devolution, and the need for a new fiscal framework (including adjustments to block grant funding) to accompany tax devolution.

15 September 2016

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IFS residential conference 2016 ‘Corporate tax avoidance: where next for policy and practice?’

Event 9 September 2016 at 10:00 <p><span class="light lightgrey sans small">Magdalen College, Oxford, OX1 4AU, United Kingdom </span></p>
Every two years, IFS holds a residential conference, aiming to facilitate high-level knowledge exchange between practitioners, policymakers and academics on key areas of policy and practice. This year we will consider how anti-avoidance measures are designed, how governments’ and businesses’ perspectives on tax avoidance are changing, and what we can expect from international efforts going forward.
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The changing composition of UK tax revenues

Journal article

By the end of the parliament, tax receipts are due to return to their pre-recession share of national income. However, compared with 2007/08, policy choices mean the taxman looks set to raise more from VAT and less from other indirect taxes; about the same amount from personal income taxes, though with more of that coming from the highest earners; less from the main property taxes; and substantially less from corporation tax. HM Treasury will be more reliant on small taxes, including five entirely new ones. Whether these changes have been part of a clear and coherent overarching strategy is, to put it kindly, unclear.

15 June 2016