Like love, stealth taxation is all around us. Those oh-so-reluctantly given public-sector pay rises will be in part repaid by increased tax, with allowances frozen and many more being pushed into the 40% (or for some, just the 20%) tax band. With interest rates at 1%, you wouldn’t have been likely to pay tax on your interest unless you had £100k or more in a bank deposit account. At 4 or 5%, that comes down to as little as £20k, £10k if you’re a high rate taxpayer (when you’re only allowed £500 of interest tax-free) after which those rates aren’t in reality quite as good as they sound. Which makes Premium Bonds and their tax-free prizes seem a still-better bet. As previously trailed, an awful lot of those who’ll have to pay some tax won’t have a clue that they should and almost certainly won’t be completing a tax return at the moment. Which will be a dilemma, not just for them, but for the taxman, too.
“CBI forecasts no Bank of England rate cuts until at least 2026”
The ‘lag’, ‘trailing leg’ or ‘long wake’ of any economic measure means that its effects are often felt long after the problem it was supposed to solve has disappeared. 2010’s ‘balancing the books within the space of one parliament’ (that went well, didn’t it?), austerity to you and me, is one example.