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Editorial
The
Turner Report
The
second report from the Pensions Commission, published on
the 30th November, recommends 'reforms to make the state
system less means-tested and closer to universal'.
An
adequate universal flat-rate 'Citizen's Pension' (CP) for
every resident adult over the state retirement age, and
paid at the rate of £109.45 per week for a single
pensioner (the same rate as the current Pension Credit),
would allow most of the 5 million senior citizens without
other financial resources to live with dignity and without
recourse to means-tested benefits. A CP would provide a
stable foundation for a portfolio including occupational
and private pensions.
A
Citizen's Income (CI) (an unconditional, non-withdrawable
income payable to each individual as a right of citizenship)
could help to avert the impending pensions crisis by dismantling
the artificial thresholds dividing retired people from working
age adults.
A
CI for all adults would replace most of the current array
of means-tested benefits (the withdrawal of which as earnings
rise discourages low-income earners from working). A CI
and a CP together would allow individuals into their 60s
and 70s to negotiate contracts for their preferred hours
of paid work, probably choosing to reduce their hours as
they get older, yet still yielding taxable earnings.
Setting
the rates for the CP and CI as a proportion of GDP per capita
would restore the former link between pensions and the prosperity
of the country. The levels of the CP and CI, rising and
falling with the fortunes of the country, would allow people
to adjust their hours of work to cover any shortfall, and
would help to stabilise economic cycles.
The
Pensions Policy Institute has calculated that a Citizen's
Pension of £110 per week (approx. 30% of GDP per capita)
could be afforded immediately within current government
spending on pensions.
Just
as important, a Citizen's Income of £90 per week,
approx. 25% of GDP per capita, is also feasible, as our
main article in this issue shows.
ASSUMPTIONS
AND CALCULATIONS FOR A SIMPLE CITIZEN'S INCOME SCHEME
By Anne G Miller
My
object for this paper is to show that a simple partial
Citizen's Income system, with a standard CI for those aged
16-59 of £90 pw, is economically feasible.
My
objectives for the CI scheme are:
To
design a very simple, transparent and accountable system.
To
reduce the need for means-testing, which leads to a reduced
take-up of the benefit. Means-testing also has a built-in
disincentive-to-work for those coming off benefits into
work, who are caught by both income tax and benefit withdrawal
rates, giving a high combined effective marginal tax rate.
Those on Child Tax Credit or Working Tax Credit, are subjected
to an effective marginal tax rate of 70% (22 % income tax,
11 % National Insurance contribution, 37 % CTC and WTC taper
rate), which is higher than the highest rate of tax (40
% income tax plus 1 % of National Insurance contribution),
paid by high-income earners.
Eligibility
to be based on residency or domicile.
For
the individual to be the tax and benefit unit.
To
minimise the degree of contingency associated with the CIs
(for instance, the amount of the CI will be independent
of marital status, domestic arrangements or sexual preferences).
It is designed specifically not to take circumstances into
account. This should reduce the complexity, improve the
efficiency and reduce the costs, of administering the system.
Although
the CI and personal income tax systems will be co-ordinated,
they will be operated separately, with the CI paid out to
individuals, and the tax collected separately. (This makes
all of us both CI recipients and potential taxpayers). Instead
of assessing the incomes of some individuals twice, once
for means-tested benefits and again for income tax, as at
present, each will be assessed once only, for income tax.
This should also both improve the efficiency and reduce
the costs of administering the system.
ASSUMPTION
1.
The
CI should reflect the prosperity of the UK, and I have chosen
for it to be related to GDP per capita, rather than the
(to me) more nebulous figure for annual average earnings.
GDP per capita seems to reflect the prosperity of the whole
country. A fixed proportion of GDP per capita also has the
advantage that it will provide a stabilising influence on
the economic cycles.
CIs
for the tax year 2005-06, have to be determined before that,
using the latest information available, which is the figure
for GDP per capita for 2003 in the United Kingdom National
Accounts, The Blue Book 2004 edition, published in the autumn
of 2004. There will be a fifteen-month gap between the end
of the year to which the GDP figure applies and the tax
year starting 15 months later.
The
relevant figures for 2003, from Blue Book 2004, Tables 1.2
and 1.5 are:
GDP
(output method) at current market prices, YBHA = £1
099 896 m
GDP
per capita, IHXT = £18 524
(This
gives an estimate for UK population of = c. 59 377 000).*
*
My estimates are calculated to 5 significant figures.
The
four-letter labels are the item labels used in the tables.
Some
further figures for population are available in Appendix
A below.
ASSUMPTION
2.
The
Citizen's Income scheme will be financed out of personal
income tax revenues.
I
assume this for two reasons.
a)
The expenditure by the government in 2003 on social benefits
in cash at £131,799m is of the same order of magnitude
as taxes on income, £145,326m, which implies that
government expenditure can be financed out of the rest of
taxation. (See Appendices B and C).
b)
It is convenient to work with a hypothecated arrangement,
in order to illustrate the feasibility of the scheme more
clearly.
ASSUMPTION
3
Table
1
The
income of the Households and Non-Profit Institutions Serving
Households (NPISHs) is roughly 80% of GDP (See table 1)
|
2001
|
2002
|
2003
|
2004
|
| GDP
at market prices, table 1.2, YBHA |
994
309
|
1
044 145
|
1
099 896
|
1
164 439
|
| Total
resources, Hshlds & NPISHs, Table 6.1.3, QWMF |
818
861
|
839
881
|
876
473
|
922
837
|
| Incomes
from hshlds/ GDP |
0.82355
|
0.80437
|
0.79687
|
0.79252
|
Source:
The Blue Book 2004 and 2005
The
sources of the difference between GDP at market prices,
YBHA, £1 099 896 m. in 2003, and Total Resources,
of Households and NPISHs, QWMF, £876 473 m. can be
discovered by a comparison of Table 1.2 (income component
method) and Table 6.1.3, and is accounted for as follows:
The
difference between the Operating Surpluses (profits) of
Corporations, and the Property Income of Households and
NPISHs, QWME, (which includes interest, dividend payments
and rent), yields £72 120 m, which will include
retained earnings;
Gross
operating surplus of general government, NMXV, is £10
722 m;
Taxes
on production and imports, NZGX, less subsidies, -AAXS,
giving a sum of £140 147 m;
A
statistical discrepancy between the income components
method of estimating GDP at market prices and the output
components method, YBHA, (which is the official GDP at
market prices), RVFC, accounts for £493 m; and
Payments
to, less receipts from, the rest of the world, -KTMP,
-£59 m.
ASSUMPTION
4. THE PERSONAL INCOME TAX SYSTEM: RECLAIMIMG THE TAX BASE
The
personal income tax system will have the following properties:
1.
National insurance contributions will be subsumed into the
income tax system.
2.
All of an individual's taxable income, from all sources,
will be treated in the same way for income tax purposes.
An
individual's taxable income is defined as gross income less
any allowable essential expenses incurred in the generation
of that income, from all sources, but before receiving their
CI, and other government transfers such as housing benefit,
or the benefits to cover the costs of a recipient's disability.
Sources of income include:
EARNINGS
(from full-time and part-time employment)
EARNINGS from SELF-employment
SHARE
SCHEMES and OPTIONS (free or cheaply from one's employer)
COMPANY
PERQUISITES (such as a company car, private medical insurance,
fringe
benefits,
commission, tips, part-time free-lance earnings)
PENSIONS, occupational and personal
INTEREST
from banks and building societies
DIVIDENDS
CAPITAL
GAINS on the sale of shares and other assets, and
RENTAL
income from properties.
GIFTS
3. No other tax reliefs, personal allowances or exemptions
will be granted,
It
is important that there are no exceptions, however apparently
laudable, because, whilst they appear to benefit middle-income
people to a modest extent, wealthy people find ways to exploit
them much more fully. Thus tax reliefs are the thin end
of the wedge of an ever-increasing raft of hidden tax expenditures,
which erode the tax base and lead to a higher standard tax
rate being imposed on the majority who cannot avoid the
tax. The withdrawal of all tax reliefs, personal allowances
and exemptions allows the tax base to be reclaimed. The
case for restoring any particular concession would have
to be argued from scratch and claimed as a visible benefit,
rather than an invisible tax expenditure.
Some
of the tax reliefs in the past have been given with laudable
aims, such as the tax reliefs on charitable donations. Charities
rely on this extra subsidy from government, but it is recommended
here that it could be given as a direct subsidy to each
charity as a proportion, say 20 or 25 %, of all of its donations
received, rather than relating them to the incomes of some
individuals.
Tax
relief on pensions and superannuation contributions were
given to encourage people to provide for their old age,
which was thought to be absolutely essential for the future
financial health of our senior citizens. However, with a
reasonable Citizen's Pension, indexed to GDP per head, this
would not have the same urgency, although individuals could
still contribute to private schemes if they wished, but
without the current subsidies, which are massive. The UK
government has been exhorting the population to save for
its old age, but the fall in the stock market, and the withdrawal
of many company occupational pension schemes has left people
with much uncertainty, which a Citizen's Pension would go
some way to ameliorate. There is popular support from various
pensions organisations for such a move. A Citizen's Pension
could provide the foundation in a portfolio of pensions.
It is far more important to make this foundation as adequate
as possible for all, rather than to subsidise the private
pensions of those who are already better off.
Appendix
D lists some of the most expensive tax expenditures and
structural reliefs, (but excluding those for Corporation
tax), in descending order of cost. In the source material,
published by Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs, HMRC, (renamed
after the merger of the Inland Revenue and Customs and Excise
in April 2005), the tax expenditures are grouped by type.
4.The
standard rate of income tax will be that required to finance
a CI scheme, together with most of the other benefits in
cash that will still be necessary, including a residual
welfare system for those who do not qualify for a CI, etc,
but these can be supplemented out of a higher rate of tax.
ASSUMPTION 5. THE CITIZEN'S INCOME SCHEME.
GDP
per capita in 2003 was £356.23 pw, or £18 524
pa, representing 100 % of GDP per capita.
There
will be three levels of CI, at roughly 31, 25 and 14 % of
GDP per capita.
Citizen's
Pension of £110 pw, £5 720 pa, 30.88% of
GDP per capita, for men and women aged 60 and over (as with
the current Pension Credit of £109.45 pw for a single
pensioner).
The age threshold can be raised, as proposed for the Basic
State Pension for women, from age 60 to age 65 over the
decade 2010 to 2020.
Standard
Citizen's Income of £90 pw, £4 680 pa, 25.26%
of GDP per capita, for all individuals aged 16 to 59.
Child
Citizen's Income of £50 pw, £2 600 pa, 14.04
% of GDP per capita, for children aged 0 to 15,
This rate for CCI is based on 2005-06 rates for Child Tax
Credit per child of £1 690 pa, and the higher rate
of Child Benefit (£17.00 pw, £884 pa), yielding
£2 574 pa, which I have rounded up to £2 600
pa.
Table
2. Recommended initial rates, based on GDP per capita for
2003
|
%
of GDP per head |
£
per annum, based on 2003 GDP p cap |
£
per week, based on 2003 GDP p cap |
| GDP
per head |
100.00
|
18,524
|
356.23
|
| CP |
30.88
|
5,720
|
110.00
|
| SCI |
25.26
|
4,680
|
90.00
|
| CCI |
14.04
|
2,600
|
50.00
|
This
is a partial basic income scheme, because it recognises
that few adults would be able to live comfortably on the
SBI alone, but it assumes that able-bodied people would
be able to find at least a few hours of work each week in
order to top up their incomes.
I
am assuming that the costs of disability will be paid separately
from the CI payment, and will continue as at present, through
the Disability Living Allowance, and through grants paid
by Social Services or local authorities.
The
total cost of the basic income scheme can be calculated
in advance (ex ante), using the 2003 figures for GDP and
population, and is presented below in Table 3a. The table
is calculated on the basis of everyone receiving the Standard
Basic Income, SBI, and then adding on the extra cost of
the Citizen's Pension, and deducting the shortfall on account
of the Child Citizen's Income.
Table
3a. The Total Cost of this Proposed Citizen's Income Scheme,
ex ante.
|
Population
numbers** 2003 thousands |
Citizen's
Income per annum |
cost
estimates |
| Total
population |
59,553.9
(100.0%)
|
£
4 680
|
£
278 712 m
|
| People
aged 60+ |
12,452.6
(20.9%)
|
+
£ 1 040
|
+
£ 12 951 m
|
| Children
aged 0 - 15 |
11,712.2
(19.7%)
|
-
£ 2 080
|
-
£ 24 361 m
|
| Total |
|
|
£
267 302 m
|
** Mid-year population estimates for 2003 were obtained
via
www.statistics.gov.uk/Statbase/Expodata/Spreadsheet/D8548.xls
The
total cost represents 24.302% of GDP of £1 099 896
m for 2003.
A
quick method for estimating a ball-park figure for the cost
of the CI scheme is given below, based on the fact that
the population aged 60 plus is roughly 21 % of the total
population, and that of children aged 0 to 15 is about 20
%: It allows one to get a rough estimate of the costs for
different levels of CI, or for different sections of the
population.
Table
3b. Quick Method for Calculating the Cost of the CI Scheme
as a Proportion of GDP.
|
Proportion
of the population |
CI
as a proportion of GDP per cap |
Cost
of CIs as a proportion of GDP |
| Citizen's
Pension |
0.21
|
0.3088
|
0.06485
|
| Standard
CI |
0.59
|
0.2526
|
0.14903
|
| Child's
CI |
0.20
|
0.1404
|
0.02808
|
| Total |
|
|
0.24196
|
In
this case, it provides an estimate for the cost of the CI
scheme as a proportion of GDP, which is reasonably close
to the more precise method.
However,
this proportion of GDP (24.302 %) will have to be grossed
up by dividing by 0.79687 (the proportion of GDP accounted
for by the income of households in 2003). Thus, the total
cost represents 30.497 % of the income of Households and
NPISHs. This also represents the rate of income tax necessary
to finance the CI scheme, but it will have to be augmented
to allow for any extra benefits in cash that may be required.
There
must be enough additional revenue to finance:
the
costs of disabilities, including the costs of care, including
residential care, special equipment, mobility, extra fuel
or laundry costs or special diets, etc. and
a
social fund for those with emergencies, and
a
redundancy fund (which in 2003 totalled £2,385 m.),
and
a
residual safety net, which will be required:
for
those who are still in poverty (despite the CI scheme),
operated mainly through a housing benefit and council
tax benefit scheme for those with no other income, and
for those who do not meet the residency or domicile
criteria to qualify for a CI, as well as
a
residual National Insurance scheme for those who will
still be entitled to National Insurance benefits, such
as SERPS (the State Earnings Related Pension), Non Contracted
Out Pensions, S2P pensions and
UK pensioners living overseas
(National
Insurance benefits to overseas residents in 2003 totalled
£1,404 m. and other benefits paid to overseas residents
in cash in 2003 came to £48 m (See Appendix C)).
There
must also be enough to cover the grants replacing those
tax expenditures for which a case is justified, (such as
charitable giving, for instance).
Adding
a further 2.503 % to income tax, to cover these extras costs,
brings income tax to 33 %, which is the same as the current
22 % plus 11 % for national insurance contributions, which
would have yielded an extra £21 940 m (0.02503 x £876
473m in 2003). Thus, a simple, partial CI scheme could be
financed out of a personal income tax system with a standard
rate of tax of 33 %.
We
can estimate the revenue from a 41 % higher rate of income
tax on taxable incomes greater than £31,400 for 2004-2005,
(or £32,400 for 2005-2006; see Appendix F below),
as follows. HMRC's estimate for the tax yield from the 40
% highest rate of income tax, by 3.430 m higher rate taxpayers
in 2004-05, is £46,730 m. This higher rate comprises
the current standard rate of 22 % plus an extra 18 %, which
will be 33 % under the new regime, (which has already been
accounted for here), plus an extra tax of (7 + 1) % of the
£46 730 m. Thus the top slice is about £9 346
m, which is only 0.8% of 2004 GDP.
Of
course, all of the gross income of higher rate taxpayers
will now be taxed, so the equivalent of (7+1)% will be levied
on the former personal allowance of £4,745 in 2004-05
for each higher-rate taxpayer, yielding £1,302 m.
Thus, a higher tax rate of 41%, and using the same thresholds
as at present, would yield an extra 0.9 % of GDP as income
tax revenue. The corresponding estimates for 2005-06 indicate
that 3.560 m tax payers paid £49 290 m in the higher
rate income tax of 40 %, and their personal allowances were
£4,895, but we do not have a GDP figure for 2005 yet,
with which to compare these. (www.hmrc.gov.uk/stats/income_tax/table2-6.pdf).
For
working out the actual costs of the CI scheme in retrospect,
(ex post), we need the latest population figures available,
which are currently for 2004, but the most relevant figures
will be for 2005, when they become available.
Table
4. The Total Cost of this Proposed Citizen's Income Scheme,
ex post.
|
Population
numbers** 2004 thousands |
CIs
per annum |
Cost
estimates 2004 |
| Total
population |
59,834.3
(100.0%)
|
£
4 680
|
£
280 025 m
|
| People
aged 60+ |
12,600.8
(21.1%)
|
+
£ 1 040
|
+
£ 13 105 m
|
| Children
aged 0 - 15 |
11,645.6
(19.5%)
|
-
£ 2 080
|
-
£ 24 223 m
|
| Total |
|
|
£
268 907 m
|
**
Mid year population estimates were obtained via www.statistics.gov.uk/Statbase/Expodata/Spreadsheet/D9081.xls
This
total cost represents 23.093 % of GDP of £1,164,439
m for 2004, which, when grossed up by 0.79252 for 2004,
yields 29.139 %. A further increase in GDP is likely to
have occurred in 2005, and will reveal a fairly comfortable
margin for errors in the ex ante calculations in Table 3a.
It is obvious that a simple partial Citizen's Income scheme,
such as the one illustrated here, is feasible, with a standard
rate of tax of 33%.
Some
of the rates for the current main benefits, for the tax
years 2004-2005 and 2005-2006 are given in Appendix E, most
of which will disappear under the new scheme.
The
appendices can be found in the Word
or pdf
versions of the Newsletter.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Department
for Work and Pensions, April 2004 and 2005, Social security
benefit rates, Leaflet GL23.
Dickens,
James and Philip Vince, 1997, How Citizen's Income could
become a practical reality, A Citizen's Income Trust
Position Paper, London: Citizen's Income Trust.
Her
Majesty's Revenue and Customs, http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/stats/income_tax
Mid-year
population estimates, http://www.statistics.gov.uk/Statbase/Expodata/Spreadsheet/D8548.xls
And http://www.statistics.gov.uk/Statbase/Expodata/Spreadsheet/D9081.xls
Miller,
Anne, 2004, 'The Blue Book: Taxes, transfers and government
expenditure', Citizen's Income newsletter, 2004,
issue 2, pp. 3-7.
Torry,
Malcolm, 'The truth the tables tell', Citizen's Income
newsletter, 2004, Issue 1, p.1-2.
United
Kingdom National Accounts: The Blue Book, 2003, 2004 and
2005, Office of National Statistics. http://www.statistics.gov.uk
Which?
Tax saving guides 2004 and 2005, Which? Ltd
The
Citizen's Income Trust Essay Prize for 2006
The
Citizen's Income Trust invites entries for its 2006 essay
prize. Entrants should be studying at a UK university during
the academic year 2005/6 at undergraduate or graduate level.
Essays should be in the fields of philosophy, political
science, social policy, economics, or other social sciences;
should be of up to 5,000 words in length; and should contribute
to the current debate on the desirability and feasibility
of a Citizen's Income: an unconditional, nonwithdrawable
income payable to each individual as a right of citizenship.
Provided that at least one entry is of sufficient quality
the winner will be awarded a prize of £500 and the
winning essay will be published in the Citizen's Income
Newsletter.
Rules:
A hard copy of the essay, along with the entrant's name
and address, should be sent to: Dr. Malcolm Torry, Director,
Citizen's Income Trust, P.O. Box 26586, London SE3 7WY,
and an electronic version (in Word or Rich Text Format)
either by disc to the same address or by email attachment
to info@citizensincome.org. Confirmation that the entrant
is studying at a UK university needs to be sent, signed
by a faculty member. The closing date is 1st May 2006. No
trustees, employees, or former trustees or employees of
the Citizen's Income Trust, or their relatives, may enter.
The judges' decision is final, and no correspondence will
be entered into.
©
Citizen's Income Trust 2006
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