The Chancellor is being urged to end the discriminatory tax regime that penalises
families when compared to the other OECD countries.

New research, which is being launched tomorrow in Parliament by the social policy
charity CARE, lays bare the alarming truth about family taxation in the UK.

The report, ‘The Taxation of Families – International Comparisons 2016’, reveals that
the tax burden faced by one-earner married couples with two children on the
average wage is 20 per cent higher in Britain than the rest of the OECD.

But the picture for British one earner married couples with two children on 75 per
cent average wage – those the Government has described as the just about
managing, face the highest effective marginal rate in the developed world, a
crippling 73 per cent.

This means that when such a family increase their incomes, they will only get to keep
27 pence from every additional pound earned. The rest will go to the government in
tax, national insurance and lost benefits.

Nola Leach, Chief Executive of CARE, commented:

“The Government has previously
said that it wants to support those families who are just about managing, but as our
report shows, this group is still being discriminated against, by a punitive and unfair
tax system. Astonishingly for those families on between half and three quarters of
the OECD average wage, the marginal tax rates they face are the highest out of any
country in this group. The problem we have identified is that our income tax system
takes no account of family responsibilities – be they to a spouse or children – placing
this burden almost entirely on the benefits system.”

Building on previous years, the report’s authors, tax experts Leonard Beighton, Don
Draper and Alistair Pearson now include a chapter highlighting the ways different
developed countries share out the income tax burden between families and singles.

It found that a one-earner married couple with two children on average wage pays
70 per cent more tax than a comparable French family, more than twice as much as
a comparable US family and 15 times as much as that on a comparable German
family.

By contrast the tax burden on a single person with no children on average wage is
9% less than the OECD average and 18 per cent less than the average for the 22 EU
countries that are OECD members.

Nola Leach continued: “There is a disturbing individualism in our tax system. Its
treatment of one-earner families with children on average wage is very unfavourable
while its treatment of single people with no family responsibilities on the same wage
is generous.”

The charity is calling on the Government to ditch its plans to spend £4 billion on
raising personal allowances from £11.5 thousand to £12.5 thousand by 2020, but
instead focus this money on families with children.

It argues that the best mechanism for this would be to significantly increase the
marriage allowance for those with dependents, while moving towards a fully
transferable allowance for all married couples in future years.

Nola Leach, concluded: “If the Government is serious about helping struggling
families, then it must act to reduce their tax burden. The simplest way to do this in
the short term would be to use the billions earmarked for raising the personal
allowance and channel this into increasing the marriage allowance.”

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