Topical Tip:

TT116: Income Tax Changes

Background to climb-down

In Gordon Brown's last Budget in 2007 he announced the 10% tax rate would be abolished with effect from April 2008. Somewhat belatedly, Labour back-benchers and other interested groups woke up to the implications of this, and in recent months the current Chancellor, Alistair Darling, has been under considerable pressure to compensate lower paid people for the losses they will suffer as a consequence of the decision.

The facts are this:

Details of the climb-down

In a dramatic move on 13 May 2008 the Chancellor announced that from September 2008 he would increase the 2008/09 tax-free allowance by £600 to £6,035 and decrease the higher rate of tax threshold by an equivalent £600. This will result in compensation of a maximum of £120 for those affected (i.e. basic rate taxpayers), whilst not changing the overall tax bill for higher rate taxpayers.

The £120 figure has been calculated to be the 'average loss per household' under the new rules. This is a combination of: the reduction in the basic rate from 22% to 20%; the movement in the tax-free and 10% tax thresholds; and average wages. Effectively it is a statistical calculation and cannot be easily derived from the changes in the tax bands.

It is still theoretically possible for some individuals to be worse off under the new rates, but the Chancellor has estimated that this will apply to less than 5% of taxpayers.

The new rate will be implemented for employees by the use of new notices of coding applied in September 2008. The tax-free allowance will be backdated to 6 April 2008 and so basic rate taxpayers should see an additional £60 in their pay packet in that month, followed by an additional £10 per month thereafter.

For self-employed persons, or those with dividend plans, their tax rates will be applied in their end of year tax computation.

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