Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Defining Decency
- 2 Hard-Pressed Families
- 3 Disabled People and Carers
- 4 The Pensioner Poverty Time Bomb
- 5 Young, Black and Held Back
- 6 Stigma and Shame or Dignity and Respect?
- 7 Equality and Discrimination
- 8 What is Social Security For?
- 9 Public Services for the Digital Age
- 10 Reimagining Work
- 11 Managing Modern Markets
- 12 Tax, Wealth and Housing
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
12 - Tax, Wealth and Housing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Defining Decency
- 2 Hard-Pressed Families
- 3 Disabled People and Carers
- 4 The Pensioner Poverty Time Bomb
- 5 Young, Black and Held Back
- 6 Stigma and Shame or Dignity and Respect?
- 7 Equality and Discrimination
- 8 What is Social Security For?
- 9 Public Services for the Digital Age
- 10 Reimagining Work
- 11 Managing Modern Markets
- 12 Tax, Wealth and Housing
- Conclusion
- References
- Index
Summary
Finally, it's time to talk about the twin elephants in the room. First, taxes: how we raise the money to pay for the public services we all rely on and which are crucial to slaying the poverty giant. Second, housing: housing costs are a central driver of poverty, locking people into poverty even as wages rise. Too many people in poverty are trapped in overcrowded, damp, unsafe homes. High costs and insecurity pull increasing numbers into homelessness. These two issues are linked. The structure of our tax system helps to shape both the housing and labour markets. How we raise money is as important as how much we raise and how we choose to spend it. Increasing the supply of housing is vital but not sufficient. We also need to change the structure of the housing market and the ways in which housing operates as an asset as well as a home.
In 2018, David Willetts (a Conservative MP and minister in the 1990s and again in the Coalition government from 2010 to 2014, now in the House of Lords, colloquially known as “Two Brains”) gave a speech in which he delivered some home truths to his fellow boomers (Willetts 2018):
We are the first generation to have lived our entire lives under the modern welfare state. We have benefited from Britain's house price boom which has made home ownership unaffordable for our children. We have done so well compared with the younger generation in so many ways that we cannot just turn to them to pay for our health and social care. And it is this cost above all – paying for a service we particularly benefit from in our old age – which is pushing public spending inexorably upwards. We are going to have to make a contribution too. And when we look at how we should do this there is one obvious source – the wealth we are sitting on.
It doesn't require two brains to know that he was right, or that actually achieving this shift is a political nightmare. But the argument that regularly breaks out about wealth taxes and inheritance needs to be understood in the broader context of how both our tax system and the shape of our national wealth have changed over the last few decades, and the pressures which make it imperative that we grasp the nettle of redesigning our approach to both.
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- Information
- Want , pp. 141 - 152Publisher: Agenda PublishingPrint publication year: 2022