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Thread: SNP are lying b******s as well !
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08-11-2022 04:56 PM #2251
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08-11-2022 05:01 PM #2252This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-11-2022 05:03 PM #2253
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08-11-2022 05:05 PM #2254
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08-11-2022 05:21 PM #2255This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Denmarks income tax has a local element to it instead of the council tax we pay. If we go up to their level and still have to pay council tax on top then I’m struggling to see how it’s the same?
Only being able to control one tax is a shocking way to run a society. We don’t even have full control of income tax. We can’t raise income tax on dividends or property income. Only earned income.
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08-11-2022 05:28 PM #2256
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08-11-2022 05:31 PM #2257
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08-11-2022 05:47 PM #2258This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Ireland tax companies lightly and yet raise more corporation tax than we can dream of. They are running a govt surplus just now.
You are saying raise income tax to fix the NHS and pay more wages to striking workers. I can’t see how raising that one tax could do all that.
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08-11-2022 05:59 PM #2259
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As for Ireland I guess you would have been happy with Truss trying to lower corporation tax. I disagree with having a race to the bottom on corporation tax ,allowing billionaires to become richer by paying pitiful tax
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08-11-2022 06:16 PM #2260This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-11-2022 08:45 PM #2261This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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08-11-2022 08:52 PM #2262
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08-11-2022 08:54 PM #2263
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08-11-2022 09:19 PM #2264This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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08-11-2022 09:42 PM #2265
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The last time someone said yeah we could only put up tax in April, so nurses rises to match inflation was a shock. I put up articles from the ft and from the economist from the end of last year, saying we were going to get massive inflation in 22 and that was post Ukraine
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08-11-2022 09:53 PM #2266
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Who are the people that predicted 10% inflation nearly two years ago?
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08-11-2022 10:11 PM #2267
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But still
June 2021
https://www.google.com/amp/s/au.finance.yahoo.com/amphtml/news/time-bomb-global-economy-013150691.html
May 21
https://archive.ph/eRfts
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09-11-2022 05:34 AM #2268This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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09-11-2022 07:02 AM #2269This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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09-11-2022 10:05 AM #2270This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Also - does Denmark have anything like National Insurance? It muddies the waters in any comparison.
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09-11-2022 10:12 AM #2271
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It obviously doesn't have to be a 10% rise, but the people moving away to pay less tax is a tory defence. Norway is low tax due to its massive wealth fund, but people aren't moving from the rest of Scandinavia which has much higher tax.
The tories are planning on raising £30 billion in the next budget from raising the highest tax rate apparently. Absolute straw clutching for people to say Scotland couldn’t and shouldn't raise funds from taxing the rich
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09-11-2022 10:51 AM #2272This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
And if you want to tax the rich, you should be taxing unearned income (ie. from investment, shares etc) - we can't - and wealth - again we can't.
The SG is already taxing the better off a bit more by slightly higher rates and diverging tax bands. I agree they could and should go further but I think gradually is the right way to do it rather than a big step.
I also think it's way, way, way beyond the time when we should have replaced council tax with a local income tax and a properly locally set local income tax at that.
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09-11-2022 11:01 AM #2273
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I've already said income tax I just one tool and a pretty major one. I wish we had more but we don't so use what you can. No one is moving down south due to more tax, everyone on here was arguing that point a month ago.
The tories are planning to raise £30 billion from income tax raises from the highest band.
Scot gov said we brought in just under £500 more last year than we would have if we had England's tax bands. Pretending we can't raise a huge amount of money by raising income tax is a cop out.
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09-11-2022 01:59 PM #2274
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I accept that you're saying income tax is only one of the levers to raise cash to then be used by the government to help its citizens. We had a committee sitting in holyrood the other day make recommendations about borrowing powers for the Scottish Government, where 4 unionist MSPs, two Labour, and two Tory decided that we didn't need them. The same MSPs will be in parliament asking the SG to raise benefits and wages for people in Scotland. Neither wonder we see them as two cheeks.
A HOLYROOD committee report has urged the UK Government to hand “significant” borrowing powers to Holyrood to help tackle the cost-of-living crisis – but Tory and Labour MSPs failed to back the recommendation.
A pre-budget report published by Holyrood’s social justice and social security committee highlighted how it has heard evidence rising costs are creating a “social emergency”, including seeing “increasingly seeing hungry children”.
The committee has called on the Scottish Government to take action such as increasing benefits in line with inflation, saying social security has a “vital role” in supporting those with low incomes.
However the report also cautions that reprioritising spending will “only go so far and will not provide a climate where Scotland can thrive”.
It highlighted evidence given by Dr Alison Hosie, research officer with the Scottish Human Rights Commission, on the issue of tackling the current economic situation and rising inflation.
In a previous committee session she noted the rest of the world "have all been using borrowing powers", adding: "The lack of them is, therefore, a significant limitation, and requesting that borrowing powers be significantly improved is a legitimate ask of the Government in the reassessment of the fiscal framework.”
The report stated: “In light of the evidence received which outlines the difficulties the Scottish Government faces in responding to crises without such powers, we request the UK Government devolves significant borrowing powers.”
SNP MSP Emma Roddick, who sits on the committee, said: "This new report shows clearly that the devolution settlement is not fit for purpose.
"As the cost of living crisis deepens, the Scottish Government is already using the powers it has - but, as is clear in today's report, the Scottish Parliament needs borrowing powers from Westminster to go further.
"The poverty-accelerating welfare policies of the Tories must be reversed and the Scottish Tories need to decide if they will stand up for the people of Scotland or their bosses at Westminster.
"It's only the full powers of independence that protect Scotland from cruel Westminster policies for good - and ensure that decisions about Scotland are taken in Scotland."
But the report also noted the four committee members from opposition parties “dissented” from this recommendation – Conservative MSPs Jeremy Balfour and Miles Briggs, along with Labour’s Pam Duncan-Glancy and Foysol Choudhury.
In April, the Scottish Government announced it would be uprating devolved benefits by 6%, but since, inflation has risen to 10.1% and the committee has urged ministers to further increase the safety net or provide “detailed justification as to why not”.
The report stated: “We recognise the importance of maintaining the real-terms value of benefits. Therefore, we expect the Scottish Government to uprate all Scottish benefits by the September Consumer Prices Index of 10.1% and if this does not happen, we require detailed justification as to why not.”
SNP MSP Natalie Don, who is deputy convenor of the committee, said: “The current cost crisis risks causing severe damage to people and organisations throughout Scotland.
“Our committee believes that by following through on its initial good work to develop a human rights budget process, the Scottish Government can ensure that the voices of people and organisations who are on the front line of the cost crisis will be heard.”
A Scottish Government spokesperson said: “The Scottish Government has a legal duty to publish a report each year that sets out the impact of inflation on social security benefits, and our plans for the next financial year. We will do this in due course.
“In April we doubled the Scottish Child Payment to £20 per week per eligible child and this will further increase to £25 per week from 14 November – a rise of 150% in less than eight months providing important additional support for low-income families, which is only available in Scotland.
“In March we also uprated eight other Scottish benefits by 6%, which was significantly higher than the 3.1% CPI by which most UK Government benefits were increased.”
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09-11-2022 02:41 PM #2275
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Huge. Hopefully can get sorted as snp won't want to be locking horns with the nurses
https://mobile.twitter.com/STVNews/s...59108246728708
Nurses across Scotland overwhelmingly vote to strike in historic first
The Royal College of Nursing said the profession has been pushed to the edge at the cost of patient safety
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09-11-2022 02:53 PM #2276This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteEvery gimmick hungry yob,
Digging gold from rock and roll
Grabs the mic to tell us,
He'll die before he's sold.
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09-11-2022 03:11 PM #2277
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This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteLast edited by grunt; 09-11-2022 at 03:13 PM.
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09-11-2022 03:14 PM #2278
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09-11-2022 03:19 PM #2279This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I'm sure everyone that was out clapping will be in full support.
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