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Scrap several UK taxes, says Institute of Economic Affairs

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The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) has published a briefing calling for taxes including CGT, stamp duty, council tax, business rates and IHT to be abolished, offering a number of alternatives in their place. These include:

The Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) has published a briefing calling for taxes including CGT, stamp duty, council tax, business rates and IHT to be abolished, offering a number of alternatives in their place. These include:

  • if CGT is not abolished, indexation allowance should be re-introduced, as CGT raises relatively little revenue and is highly distortive as a tax on transactions;
  • if IHT is not abolished, the government should move to a system that taxes large gifts at a rate closer to 20% over a large lifetime tax-free limit of around £500,000; and
  • stamp duty, council tax and business rates should be replaced with property taxes that are much less economically harmful, such as an annual property-based tax set at a fixed percentage of a property’s value, with a cap of 1%, phased in over five or ten years;

Professor Philip Booth, academic fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs, commented that: ‘changes to these three groups of taxes would considerably simplify the tax system and make taxes more economically efficient’. The proposals would, Professor Booth added, ‘represent a radical reform of, and a huge improvement to the UK tax system’.

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