Nick Clegg Pushing For Further Rise In Personal Allowance
Nick Clegg Pushing For Further Rise In Personal Allowance

PERSONAL TAX

A £10,000 tax free personal allowance for people born after 5th April 1948 (Under 65) is to take effect from April 2014, as revealed in the 2013 Budget. However, Nick Clegg is pushing for an additional £500 increase for the following tax year.

Current plans are to allow inflation only rises in allowances, but the extra £500 rise would be equivalent to a £100 drop in tax bills for basic rate taxpayers - and take an additional 500k people out of income tax. No word yet on national insurance changes.

The cost to the Government for a straightforward cut is estimated at £1 billion, so taxpayers can expect further adjustments downwards for the higher rate tax band to reduce Government exposure. In the recent years the personal allowance has seen sharp rises, but these have been countered with sharp falls to the threshold at which people are liable to pay higher rate tax (40 percent).

Alternative methods to raise funds for the cut include the much publicised 'Mansion Tax' - something the Conservative part of the coalition will probably not agree to.

Mr Clegg has also talked about reaching the long term goal eventually of mating the tax free allowance to the minimum wage - currently £12,500. Once the national insurance and income taxes are aligned this would take anyone on minimum wage completely out of taxation.

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