the funniest thing is, australia has higher income tax and MUCH higher corporate taxes than the UK. i.e. the exact things i'm proposing and speaking in support of. you're evidently still drawing down handsome dividends from your investment portfolio in australian businesses. those corporate taxes aren't ruining the economy or sending hardworking CEOs into penury.
it's amazing what you accuse me of whilst not examining your own position at all. australia, who glided through the global financial crisis by pulling shit out of the ground, populating the landmass with more cows than people, and proceeding to export it all to asia like a good little client state. the wealth of your nation and health of your society, including state budgets, swelled and kept in the black because of fossil fuels, minerals and cattle. and yet a state which still charges nearly 2x the corporate tax of the UK and does damn well by it.
it's amazing what you accuse me of whilst not examining your own position at all. australia, who glided through the global financial crisis by pulling shit out of the ground, populating the landmass with more cows than people, and proceeding to export it all to asia like a good little client state. the wealth of your nation and health of your society, including state budgets, swelled and kept in the black because of fossil fuels, minerals and cattle. and yet a state which still charges nearly 2x the corporate tax of the UK and does damn well by it.
but this state of affairs? only someone who is selfish would wish to see that change.A comparison of personal tax rates across Europe, Australia and the US by Guardian Money reveals how average earners in Britain on salaries of £25,000, or “middle-class” individuals on £40,000, enjoy among the lowest personal tax rates of the advanced countries, while high earners on £100,000 see less of their income taken in tax than almost anywhere else in Europe.