Question Author
Quite so, hc.
Someone on a low income with a disposable income of, say, £100 per week can currently buy £85.10 worth of pre-VAT goods. Assuming they still have only £100 to spend they can now purchase “only” £83.34 of pre-tax goods – a difference of just £1.76. Bearing in mind that a good proportion of purchases made by poorer people are on zero rated items such as food and children’s clothes this tax increase is not going to have a life threatening influence on them.
Someone with a more affluent lifestyle who spends, say, £250 per week on VAT rated items will have to pay just £5.32 more to buy the same goods – less than the cost of a packet of cigarettes. A lot of fuss over relatively small beer which is also small in terms of the nation’s deficit. (I believe it is estimated to raise about £13bn per annum). And certainly not worth the acres of coverage it has received on TV, Radio and in the press.
A more worthy story would be to cover the suggestion of the Boy Miliband that it is “the wrong tax at the wrong time”. Such coverage could include asking him to suggest what might be the right tax to get the country out of the mother of all financial messes (sorry, I omitted the word “global”) that his party left us in.
But I didn't see that get much air time.