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Voters desperate amid 'cripplingly high' tax burden

The tax burden increasesThe tax burden increases

Monday, 29, Sep 2008 12:00

Labour comes out on top in a poll on taxing and spending, new research shows, as it is estimated the lifetime tax burden placed on UK households has risen to £668,000.

A report from the Taxpayers' Alliance suggests public opinion supports both tax cuts and more green taxes, with floating voters likely to prefer a party which leans towards tax cuts as the credit crunch takes hold.

The £668,000 figure represents an increase on the lifetime tax bill reported last year. And with poor families being hit even harder, seeing their tax bill jump 13 per cent in the last few months, the issue is becoming a serious one for political parties.

Only five per cent think the government taxes too little and spends too little, whereas 67 per cent agreed with the statement that 'the government spends too much and therefore taxes us too much'.

All parties, it seems, are criticised for taxing and spending too much. Thirty-five per cent thought Labour had got it about right, compared to 24 per cent for the Liberal Democrats and just five per cent for the Conservatives.

"The credit crunch has put families in a situation where they are having to economise at home, so they expect politicians to do likewise and cut back on government spending and give them some of their money back through tax cuts," explained TaxPayers' Alliance chief executive Matthew Elliott.

"Voters have also seen right through all the rhetoric about tax rising for green reasons - they know that the politicians are using it as an excuse to squeeze us for more cash. The whole politics of tax and spend has changed with the credit crunch and voters want to see politicians looking for ways to save money."


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Tim Oates, Abingdon: They can make a start by getting rid of the 'non' jobs which abound in the publice sector. Under Labour this country is now similar to the former Soviet Union where everybody had a job, only a substantial number were 'non' jobs? Then they could turn their attention to unfunded public sector pension promises starting with the politicians themselves, who have given themselves a 'gold plated' pension that no private sector worker could possibly afford and all without auditing of their activities to ascertain whether these people are actually worth it! Further, why should pensioners on fixed incomes be paying for local government & police pensions out of their council tax payments? Further still, why have we got 43 independent police forces in this country?, there is great scope for reducing vertical layers of management in the police & combining forces in order to effect substantial cuts in public expenditure. Yet further still, the USA gets by with approximately 450 congressmen to govern a nation of 300 million yet the UK has 635 MP's, why?


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