Tax burden ‘is at highest level for SEVENTY YEARS’

Tax burden ‘is at highest level for SEVENTY YEARS’ amid warnings Rishi Sunak will strangle recovery if he moves to fill black hole in government finances at Budget next month

The tax burden is at a 70-year high amid warnings businesses face disaster if Chancellor Rishi Sunak moves to raise more money in next month’s Budget.

The Treasury is set to rake in 34.2 per cent of economic output in the next financial year, according to campaign group the TaxPayers’ Alliance. 

The average tax burden – the amount of tax taken by the Treasury compared with the size of the economy – over the last five years has already climbed to 33.8 per cent, the highest since 1951. 

The Chancellor is believed to be considering a rise in capital gains tax as he tries to balance the books after the coronavirus pandemic.

Business tax and fuel duty rises are also thought to be among the potential targets – amid warnings that the economy could take a decade to recover.

But in contrast the CBI has been calling for the holiday on business rates to be extended further, with firms still under huge pressure.     

Rishi Sunak, pictured walking in London yesterday, is believed to be considering a rise in capital gains tax as he tries to balance the books after the coronavirus pandemic

The Treasury is set to rake in 34.2 per cent of economic output in the next financial year, according to campaign group the TaxPayers' Alliance

The Treasury is set to rake in 34.2 per cent of economic output in the next financial year, according to campaign group the TaxPayers’ Alliance

The Prime minister and Chancellor are to head up a new taskforce to rebuild the battered economy in the wake of the pandemic.

The Chancellor is mulling increases to capital gains tax – paid on shares and other asset sales to bring it into line with income tax rates in news likely to alarm Tory MPs.

Corporation tax could also rise from 19 to 24 per cent under plans that would allow the Tories to keep to their manifesto pledge not to increase VAT, National Insurance or inheritance tax, the Telegraph reported. 

And fuel duty rises are seen to be ‘inevitable’ after a decade-long freeze, sources told the newspaper.  A 1p or 2p increase in a litre of fuel is believed to be ‘bearable’ in the circumstances, it was said.

Although March’s Budget is unlikely to include aggressive tax-raising measures, given that the country is still likely to be in lockdown, the Chancellor has warned backbenchers that he will have to start tackling the Government’s soaring deficit of £400billion before the end of the year.

Public debt now stands at more than 100 per cent of GDP for the first time since the 1960s.

However, the TaxPayers’ Alliance analysis found the UK’s level of taxation is now expected to be higher than at any time since Clement Attlee was in Number 10 between 1945 and 1951.

Taxes were lower under Winston Churchill’s premiership than they have been under each of the last three Conservative prime ministers, while the biggest rise in taxation came under Labour’s Harold Wilson.

Mr Sunak is desperate to get the public debt – which is now larger than the size of the economy at more than £2trillion – back to a more manageable size.

The taxpayer has backed £72billion of coronavirus emergency loans, and has spent £46.4 billion on supporting furloughed employees who may otherwise have lost their jobs.

Mr Sunak is desperate to get the public debt - which is now larger than the size of the economy at more than £2trillion - back to a more manageable size

Mr Sunak is desperate to get the public debt – which is now larger than the size of the economy at more than £2trillion – back to a more manageable size

But experts worry that raising taxes could be counter-productive, as it could stifle any economic recovery.

John O’Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: ‘This research confirms that we’re facing the highest taxes in a generation.

‘The sustained tax burden is now the highest it’s been since the country was recovering from the Second World War 70 years ago, and any tax rises in the next Budget will put that figure even higher.

‘In these difficult times, the Chancellor should give hard-pressed families and businesses a respite from taxes, offer a rescue to struggling sectors and try to revive the economy.’