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The VAT Runneth Over

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  • The VAT Runneth Over

    High street fears VAT could rise to 20%

    Prospect of sales tax increase could stamp out green shoots of recovery, say retailers



    VAT Takes Flight

    Sir Stuart Rose, chief executive of Marks and Spencer, said he would not rule out VAT increase as the UK is 'skint'. Photograph: Stephen Hird/Reuters

    Retailers are worried: just when it starts to look as though the worst might be over on the high streets, there are growing fears that an increase in VAT to 20% next year – and maybe even an extension of the tax to food, albeit at a lower rate – is heading their way.

    Last week, Sir Stuart Rose, the chairman of Marks & Spencer, said he "would not rule [an increase] out" because the UK is "skint as a country". On the same day, Simon Wolfson, the chief executive of Next – who has been tipped as a possible future minister in a Cameron government – said he remained cautious about the outlook for next year because government expenditure was going to have to be cut, while public sector jobs would be lost and "all taxes will have to go up".

    An increase in VAT to 20% would stoke inflation, but would also bring in big money for a government facing a deficit of £175bn this year – and it would be an annual boost rather than a one-off benefit.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2...-retail-vat-20

  • #2
    Re: The VAT Runneth Over

    "An increase in VAT to 20% would stoke inflation"

    ??

    Welcome to Sweden, where VAT has been 25% for as long as I can remember . . . except there are much lower levels for food and some other things.

    Does Sweden have high inflation?
    No, but high VAT tax avoidance, as one might expect.
    Justice is the cornerstone of the world

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    • #3
      Re: The VAT Runneth Over

      Looking at the Wikipedia table of VAT rates across europe I can't see how the VAT rate will not go up higher than 17.5%.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Value_added_tax#Tax_rates

      Most of the large countries already have VAT rates of 19+% and they are already out of the recession and are not facing the massive deficit that the UK is.

      However I doubt Labour will risk announcing any rise until after the election in June.

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