Property taxes

Property taxes

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Is our tax system fair? It depends...

Comment

The basic question of whether our tax system is fair is at the heart of many of our public debates. Discussions of whether ‘the rich’ or companies are paying their ‘fair share’ is regularly in, or underlying, the news headlines. These are important questions. If we want to ensure that we can raise the revenues to pay for the public goods and services that we all want, we need to be able to have sensible debates about how much tax we raise, who we raise it from and how we spend it.

3 November 2017

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A survey of the UK tax system

Report

This document provides an overview of the UK tax system, describing how each of the main taxes works and setting their current state in a historical context.

23 November 2016

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Taxation and welfare

Book Chapter
Chapter 41 of P. Alcock, T. Haux, M. May and S. Wright (eds.) (2016), The Student's Companion to Social Policy, 5th edition. This chapter provides a brief overview of the UK tax system, key concepts and debates in taxation, and emerging issues.

5 August 2016

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The goose's golden egg: taxes, benefits and redistribution in the UK

Book Chapter
The prime function of the tax system is to raise revenue. On that measure the current tax system looks in many ways remarkably similar to that in place 40 years ago in the late 1970s. In the current tax year, the UK government expects to raise 15% of national income from taxes on personal income, 10% from indirect taxes, and 2% from corporation taxes, little different from what it did in 1978-79. Other effects though are quite different. If the tax system’s first job is to raise revenue, its second – alongside the benefit system – is to undertake redistribution in a way which minimises economic costs and disincentives. On these measures the UK tax and benefit system has undergone a dramatic transformation, leaving it almost unrecognisable from that in place 40 years ago, let alone from when the first edition of Tolley’s Income Tax was launched in 1916. This chapter explores the consequences of just a few of these changes for how the tax and benefit system redistributes resources, and the incentive individuals face to increase their earnings

31 July 2016

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Financial Incentives to Work: Comparing Ireland and the UK

Report

This paper provides a comprehensive comparison of the financial incentive to work in Ireland and the UK. It uses closely harmonised tax and benefit microsimulation models for both countries, based on household survey data, to provide an accurate and representative picture of the financial incentive to be in employment and to progress facing key groups in both countries.

20 June 2016

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Discussion of R. Avi-Yonah, "Reinventing the wheel"

Presentation

This presentation was given as a discussion of Reuven Avi-Yonah's paper 'Reinventing the wheel: What we can learn from the Tax Reform Act of 1986' at the Oxford University Centre for Business Taxation 9th Annual Symposium in Oxford on 23 June 2015.

23 June 2015

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Unknown quantities: Labour’s ‘non-dom’ proposal

Comment

The Labour Party has proposed abolishing ‘non-dom’ status for people who have lived in the UK for a significant length of time. This Observation sets out what is known, and what is not, about non-doms and the likely effects of Labour’s proposal.

9 April 2015