[guide.chat] news money budget tax

  • From: vanessa <qwerty1234567a@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "GUIDE CHAT" <guide.chat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2012 00:05:18 -0000

Osborne picks the pockets of pensioners: Four million elderly will pay bill for 
Chancellor's tax giveaway
Those who turn 65 or 75 next year will be worst affected by 'granny tax'
4.4 million pensioners with incomes between £10,500 and £28,000 can expect to 
lose out
PUBLISHED: 23:33, 21 March 2012 | UPDATED: 23:43, 21 March 2012
Tax raid: A tieless George Osborne hours before the Budget announcement 
yesterday
Millions of middle-class pensioners are to be hit by a £3.5billion ?granny tax? 
that will help pay for a record income tax cut for people in work.
Plans slipped out in George Osborne?s Budget yesterday will mean tax allowances 
for the over-65s ? first introduced in 1925 by then Chancellor Winston 
Churchill ? being frozen or axed.
People who turn 65 or 75 next year will be worst affected but, in all, 
4.4million pensioners with incomes of between £10,500 and £28,000 can expect to 
lose out.
The Treasury was taken aback by the strength of the backlash against Mr 
Osborne?s decision.
The tax raid, described privately by some Tory MPs as a serious political 
mistake, overshadowed other measures in the Chancellor?s widely trailed 
statement.
Mr Osborne raised the threshold at which people start to pay tax to £9,205, an 
£1,100 increase and the biggest ever single tax break for working people. It 
means the Coalition has lifted two million out of tax altogether.
The 23million basic rate taxpayers will benefit most, saving £220 a year, but 
everyone earning up to £100,000 will see some benefit. 
The policy of making the first £10,000 of income tax free has been a key Lib 
Dem demand.
Mr Osborne also took a gamble by cutting Labour?s 50p top rate of tax on income 
over £150,000 to 45p from next April, despite polls suggesting two-thirds of 
voters wanted it to stay. He claimed it was raising ?next to nothing?.
BUDGET 2012: Fuel prices WILL go up by 3.02p from August to 145p a litre
BUDGET 2012: Five million pensioners hit by 'outrageous £3bn stealth Granny 
Tax' that will cost them £260 a year each
BUDGET 2012: 300,000 more dragged into 40 per cent tax band to pay for rise in 
personal allowance
BUDGET 2012: Every tax payer to get statement revealing exactly how their money 
is spent
He delighted business with a 2p corporation tax cut and a pledge to cut it by a 
further 2p to 22p by 2014 and aim for 20p after that.
Other announcements included:
??A partial retreat on child benefit cuts, so only those earning more than 
£60,000 will lose it altogether.
??A mansion tax ?lite? ? a new 7 per cent rate of stamp duty on homes worth 
£2million or more.
??A fuel duty rise of 3p a litre to go ahead as planned.
??£10billion in further cuts to welfare spending by 2016.
??The biggest overhaul of planning laws for 60 years, speeding up developments.
??VAT loopholes to be closed, pushing up the cost of hot food in supermarkets.
??Up to a million more sucked into 40p tax rate as threshold reduced from 
£42,475 to £41,450.
??A small rise in the forecast for growth for this year, to 0.8 per cent, 
avoiding a double dip recession.
The Chancellor hailed his third Budget as one that ?rewards work? and would 
boost business. ?This country borrowed its way into trouble. 
Enlarge  
'Now we?re going to earn our way out,? he told MPs.
But Labour leader Ed Miliband said millions would pay more while millionaires 
paid less. ?It is a millionaires? Budget that squeezes the middle,? he said.
Since 1925 pensioners have enjoyed higher personal tax allowances than younger 
workers. 
When Churchill introduced them he said: ?I consider that the savings of old 
people on a small scale are virtually earned income.?
Mr Osborne skated around the impact of his decision to phase out the allowances 
in his Budget statement, hailing it as an important step to simplify the tax 
system.
Usually, limits rise each year, but he is freezing them at £10,500 for existing 
pensioners aged 65 to 74, and £10,650 for over-75s.
From next April, new pensioners will have a tax-free allowance of only £9,205, 
bringing them into line with the working population.
The Treasury said 4.4million people would be worse off by an average of £83 a 
year in real terms by 2013/14. 
Those who turn 65 next year will be the biggest loser, suffering an average 
loss of £285.
The surprise decision to scrap income tax breaks for the over-65s will leave 
pensioners worse off by £1.2billion a year by 2015, raking in almost 
£3.5billion in total for the Treasury by then.
Mr Osborne said that in cash terms, at least, no pensioner would be worse off. 
Aides said the current system was so complex that millions fail to collect the 
right tax relief, deterred by complicated means-testing forms.
They also insisted that the Government?s record increase to the state pension 
meant it would be worth £130 a year by 2013.
However, future pensioners were dealt another blow as the Chancellor confirmed 
he intends to link increases in the state pension age to longevity ? likely to 
mean people have to wait until their 70s before they get state retirement 
payments.
Dr Ros Altmann, director-general of over-50s group Saga, and a former Treasury 
pensions adviser, pointed out that richer pensioners would be unaffected, 
adding: ?This is an outrageous assault on decent middle class pensioners.
?This Budget contains an enormous stealth tax for older people. 
'There is nothing for savers, there is nothing to improve the annuity market, 
nothing to appease the damage of quantitative easing and nothing to support ISA 
changes and shelter older people?s money in cash. This Budget is terrible news 
for pensioners.?
Mr Osborne said he would not divert from the Coalition?s austerity programme. 
And his plan to slash borrowing appeared to be on course.
It has fallen from the record £157billion racked up in Labour?s final year of 
power to £126billion this year and is forecast to drop to £21billion in 2016-17.
A 'terrible blow for pensioners': Backlash as the Chancellor axes tax break for 
elderly introduced by Churchill
Pensioners' groups last night attacked the Chancellor?s decision to remove a 
valuable tax break from millions of elderly people.
Nicknamed the ?granny tax?, the move means that more than 4.4million of the 
UK?s 11million pensioners ? those aged over 65 with an income between £10,500 
and £28,930 ? will be hit.
The elderly currently enjoy a higher tax-free allowance ? the amount of income 
they can have before paying tax ? than ordinary workers.
'Granny tax': The Chancellor has announced that anyone retiring from April 5, 
2013, will be stripped of the tax break introduced by Winston Churchill in 1925
Furious: John and Jacqueline Barrett, will be left worse off by the Budget
This extra allowance means they pay less tax and so can make their incomes 
stretch further.
At present they can pay £493 a year less tax than a worker on identical income. 
Anyone aged over 75 gets a higher allowance again, meaning they pay £523 less 
tax.
This tax break was introduced by Winston Churchill in 1925 to recognise that 
pensioners have lower average incomes and have already spent their lives paying 
tax and National Insurance.
But yesterday the Chancellor announced that anyone retiring from April 5, 2013 
would be stripped of this perk.
Instead of getting a higher allowance of £10,500 they will get the same as 
everyone else ? £9,205. 
The gap between the allowances pensioners receive and what ordinary taxpayers 
are given is already being decreased.
Age UK said the changes mean pensioners will end up paying as much as £259 more 
income tax than they otherwise would have.
Last night Neil Duncan-Jordan, spokesman for the National Pensioners 
Convention, said: ?Pensioners seem to be carry the brunt of the burden. 
'This extra allowance was vital for those on limited incomes. Now every year 
this allowance is not increased they will feel poorer. 
'And for those that are going to miss out altogether it really is a terrible 
blow.?
Those already claiming the extra allowance will have it frozen until the 
allowance for regular taxpayers catches up.
The granny tax will save the Treasury £3.5billion over the next five years.
But many pensioners are already struggling from policies designed to boost the 
economy. 
Many live on the interest from their savings and had their incomes slashed 
since the bank of England base rate was cut to 0.5 pc three years ago.
And those retiring today have seen payouts on pensions plunge by two-thirds as 
a by-product of the Government?s policy of pumping more money into the economy.
The Government?s cuts have been passed off as an attempt to simplify tax for 
pensioners who are currently entitled to a baffling array of allowances and tax 
credits which many fail to claim.
But wealthier pensioners do not get these extra allowances. Those with incomes 
of more than £24,000 have it gradually stripped away. 
At £28,930 all they can earn tax free is the same as ordinary taxpayers.
Pensioners have long objected to losing the higher allowance.
They say the way it is removed is confusing and can often end up with them 
paying the wrong tax and being forced to fill out self-assessment tax forms.
Last year, Money Mail passed hundreds of readers? letters to the Office for Tax 
Simplification to end this complicated rule.
But yesterday, the Chancellor announced that the higher allowances would be 
taken away.
Under the changes anyone  who turns 65 from April 5 next year will be deprived 
of the higher  allowance immediately. 
Instead, they will qualify for the basic personal allowance of £9,205 which all 
taxpayers get.
Those born after April 5, 1938 but before April 6, 1948 will qualify for a 
higher personal allowance of £10,500. 
Anyone born before April 6, 1938 will be able to earn £10,660 before being 
taxed.
The freeze in allowances will see 4.4million pensioners lose £83 in the 2013/14 
tax year, according to figures from HM Revenue & Customs.
Nicola Roberts, tax partner at accountants Deloitte, said: ?The very people 
that need the money the most are being most affected.
?Pensioners have always been unhappy at the way the age-related allowance was 
overly complex but the way this has been 'simplified' means less well-off 
pensioners will be hit.?
Million more dragged into 40p tax band
Around a million workers will become higher rate  taxpayers over the next year  
in a move that will hit hard-working families.
Experts warned yesterday that the grab will trap cash-strapped taxpayers who 
are struggling to make ends meet.
The sleight of hand last night threatened to overshadow the  Coalition?s 
much-hyped rise in the personal allowance to £9,205 ? a move which will leave 
basic rate  taxpayers £220 a year better off from next April.
At present, you pay 40 per cent tax if you earn £42,475 or over.
The pain will begin next month when the threshold is frozen at this level, 
which accountants warn will bring around 330,000 workers into the higher tax 
band as their earnings increase.
This will be exacerbated in April next year when the threshold is cut to 
£41,450 ? a reduction George Osborne failed to mention in his speech yesterday. 
The move will catch 680,000 workers ? bringing  the total to 1.01million over 
the next two years ? into the tax net.
Mike Warburton, a senior tax partner at accountants Grant Thornton, who made 
the prediction, said: ?At a level of £41,450, it is not just the wealthy who 
are paying higher rate tax rates, but many who do not earn that much more than 
the national average salary [of £26,000].? 
Last night the Treasury admitted the reduction in the threshold would create an 
extra 630,000 higher rate taxpayers in 2013/14.
It is not the first time that the  Government has made tax changes which 
increase the number of higher rate taxpayers. Last April, an extra 630,000 
workers began paying the higher tax when the threshold was cut from £43,875 to 
£42,475.
As a result, the number of higher rate taxpayers has ballooned from 3.11million 
during the 2010/11 tax year to 3.74million.
Enlarge  
A spokesman for debt advisers the Consumer Credit Counselling  Service said: 
?Paying higher rate tax is an added pressure on a lot of household budgets. 
?£41,450 is a good income if you have no dependents or credit commitments. But 
it could be stretched to the limit if you have children, a partner who?s not 
earning, a large mortgage or are living in the South-East.?  
The Chancellor also confirmed he was accelerating plans to raise the threshold 
for paying income tax to £10,000. From April next year it will rise by £1,100 
to £9,205. 
The move leaves basic rate taxpayers £220 better off in cash terms, which the 
Treasury says is equivalent to £170 in real terms. 
Higher rate taxpayers will also benefit, although their tax saving will be 
worth just £42.50 a year in real terms ? equal to 82p a week. 
Mr Osborne said the move, which will cost £3.3billion next year, was the 
biggest-ever rise in the personal allowance. Treasury aides have also insisted 
the increase at the lower end of the allowance would offset the impact of more 
people paying higher rate tax. Sources claimed no  one earning less than 
£100,000 would lose out in cash terms.
Overall, 24million people below that income level will benefit and 840,000 
people will be taken out of tax altogether, taking the total to two million.
n All taxpayers will be handed an annual personal statement revealing how their 
taxes are spent, it was confirmed yesterday. George Osborne said workers had 
the right to know where their money went.



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