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Blog: When Paying Tax Could Save You Money

Shelagh Young reflects on the budget announcements in the context of our recent Great Risk Transfer research.

30th October 2024

Photo of Shelagh Young in a blue woollen jumper smiling and wearing glasses.

Shelagh Young reflects on today’s budget announcements in the context of our recent Great Risk Transfer research on the changed relationship between employees and employers in the context of financial wellbeing.


Has the Government broken its promise not to increase taxes on working people by increasing employer’s payroll costs?

No one can pretend that the 1.2% increase in employer’s National Insurance Contributions (NICS) and reduction in the threshold at which this tax kicks in announced in Rachel Reeves’s budget statement won’t increase costs to business.

But, is arguing, as many critics have, that this amounts to a tax on workers backed by evidence?

The immediate budget post-mortem, driven partly by the opposition’s outraged response, delved into questions of whether voters were betrayed. But while the trustworthiness of Governments obviously matters, these are surely not the most important questions to be focused on in the aftermath of what is generally agreed to have been a very significant budget indeed.

Trotting out common sense assumptions that a tax on employers is a tax on the workers simply isn’t good enough.

Superficially it seems obvious that many employers will pass on this cost - for example in higher prices to consumers, lower wage rises, redundancies or reductions in growth through recruitment meaning a contraction of the jobs market. 

Indeed the same was said when the National Minimum Wage (NMW) was first introduced and will no doubt be said about other measures in this budget which will increase the NMW significantly in 2025.

Unfortunately for the critics there is very little evidence that such measures do have the dire negative impact on “working people” so often predicted by the business sector and its representatives.

For one thing this budget, like others before it, maintained and, in some cases increased the corporate welfare measures that will reduce the impact on some employers.

In the case of NICS, the Employment Allowance was increased significantly meaning that the smallest employers with four or fewer employees on the NMW will pay no employer NICS at all. But, over time, there will be other ways in which many employers can compensate for higher taxes.

Paying more to spend less

For example, if this budget really does lead to greater investment in the NHS and other important public services, might employers need to spend less on mitigating the impact of poor public services by providing ever more costly employee benefits?

Earlier this year we explored how employers were addressing diminishing employee wellbeing.  Measures being taken ranged from enhanced private healthcare plans including services such as “virtual” GPs to schemes offering loans for rent deposits.

The reasons for investing in employee wellbeing were clear - employers are seeking to reduce absenteeism and increase productivity by mitigating the stresses and strains affecting their employees many of which they attribute to matters such as the difficulty people have in accessing NHS care, expensive housing and childcare and even, poor public transport

So the question we would like to add into the budget debate mix is why employers and their representatives rarely mention the costs to business of what the Chancellor referred to as public services that are “on their knees”?

Whether or when this budget will achieve the Government’s stated goal of “rebuilding Britain” remains to be seen but the hope that it could help rebalance the burden of risk employers currently bear for the poor health and wellbeing of their workers should not be ignored.

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David Hume Institute David Hume Institute

Blog: Are we singing a new song?

New blog from David Gow, DHI Trustee, are we singing a new song? Can things only get worse?

29th August 2024

by David Gow, DHI Trustee

"Fings can only get worse," Sir Keir Starmer intoned in the 10 Downing Street rose garden on August 27 in a reverse reprise of Labour's 1997 campaign song . "Before they get better." He added that the UK should "accept short-term pain for long-term gain." It's a tough ask but maybe Scots at least are up for it.

Perhaps, indeed. What emerges from our latest quarterly survey of voter sentiment towards the Scottish Economy, Understanding Scotland, is that Scots are increasingly torn between feeling (a shade) more upbeat and anxious, between modest optimism and continuing pessimism.

Certainly, more than half (56%) of the 2227 respondents to the survey conducted exactly a month after the July 4 General Election still think Scotland is heading in the wrong direction but that's six points down on the record 62% in May while those believing the opposite are up four points at 23%. 

What's more, fears about the cost of living/inflation at 58% are down close to levels last seen in January 2022 (56%), probably reflecting the upturn in earnings and even (some) lower prices. (The survey pre-dates Ofgem's announcement of a 10% hike in energy guide prices). Most tellingly, those thinking that general economic conditions are worse than 12 months ago have fallen to 52% (net) or the lowest level since the survey began in October 2021. Personal negativity is down to 42% from a high of 65% in November 2022 while optimism is up to 15% (net) - hardly a dizzying decline but worth monitoring to see if it upticks

As we and our colleagues at the Diffley Partnership say in the report's intro, "a growing proportion are unsure about the country’s direction, suggesting a populace still searching for clarity in uncertain times." As we point out, there remains a significant sense of precarity, notably among families with children.

Unhealthy options among the poor

More than one in five (22%) is still cutting back on fruit and veg to cut food bills, a bad signal for a nation fighting rampant obesity, while a similar number is reducing meal/portion sizes to save money - the same goal pursued by the 14% skipping meals. It's surely bad news that more than a half (52%) admits to shopping on price rather than health, while a quarter or more is eating processed food and/or cheap food requiring little or no cooking. And we know from here and elsewhere that it's poorer parents, particularly young mothers, who skimp on meals so they can feed their kids.

Financial resilience remains worryingly high among less well-off households. A third of households with children are not confident they could raise £100 in an emergency without borrowing, a level that rises to 58% when the required loan is £500. Inequality may not be a substantial policy issue (at just 8%) but poverty remains among the biggest priorities (27%).

Tax and spend alerts

Ahead of the October 30 Budget (UK) and the Scottish Government's renewed brake on spending, concern about manging public finances is on the up - at 29% compared with 24% a year ago. And a third remains convinced spending on public services is an important issue facing the Scottish economy. Rachel Reeves' "black hole" is clearly and understandably putting the wind up a lot of folk., including actual and/or potential pensioners (a concern for 12% or up three points on May.)

Will hospital consultation/treatment waiting lists come down? Obviously, it's too soon to tell but healthcare and the NHS remain by far the biggest concern (51%) - compared with the mere 8% thinking of the constitution, an issue that does not win elections. Nor, surprisingly, do green/climate change issues (just 11%, down one point on May).

Unsurprisingly, however, immigration and crime are rising up people's political agenda, with the former at a survey peak of 13% (up three points on May) and the latter at a new high of 11% (up two points). The two are often wrongly linked, notably in tabloid media, but both may well prove growing headaches for the new UK government. We shall closely monitor trends here.

Overall, it's clear from this survey that the new UK government and whichever administration emerges from the elections to Holyrood due in May 2026 have a lot to do to convince a sceptical population that those "sunlit uphills" can be glimpsed around the corner. Again, hardly surprising after this dreich summer...

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