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Britain
Great Britain: the new Germany
2006-01-21
UK taxes now higher than in Germany.
IT’S official: Great Britain is no longer a low-tax economy. For the first time in recent history, Germans will pay less tax than the British this year, signalling the end of an era and Britain’s 15-year dalliance with economic liberalism.
I thought Britain's economic liberalism began with Thatcher in 1979. That would make it a 26 year dalliance.
It is a hugely significant milestone in Britain’s renewed economic decline but one which predictably has gone completely unnoticed by Westminster and the economically-illiterate media that covers it.

One of the longstanding concerns of this newspaper is that the once healthy gap between euro zone tax-and-spending rates and those of Britain is being slowly and stealthily eroded, thanks to Chancellor Gordon Brown and a belated recognition from euro zone economies that they had to slim their bloated states to survive in the global economy. Now our worst fears have come to pass.

For those who still think Britain a relative tax haven and Germany a paragon of socialism, the figures are shocking, painting an economic map which most will not recognise and the government has successfully hidden. As we report on page 1 today, the share of tax and non-tax government receipts in Germany has eased significantly from 46.7% of gross domestic product (GDP) in 1999 to an expected 42.1% in 2006, according to internationally comparable and reliable figures from the independent Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). In the UK, the share of tax and non-tax government receipts in GDP has risen from 40.7% to a forecast 42.4%. From a gap of six percentage points in the British taxpayer’s favour just six years ago, the advantage has now swung dramatically to Germany, albeit by just 0.3 points of GDP. Mr Brown’s highly-suspect Treasury figures paint a rather different picture; but unlike those produced by the OECD they are not internationally comparable.

A similar trend is true of public spending, as the OECD figures also reveal. German general government outlays have fallen from 49.3% of GDP in 1996 to 46.8% in 2005; and between 2000 and 2005 the UK share jumped from 37.5% to 45%. For 2006, the OECD expects the German share to fall to 45.7%, within striking distance of the UK’s 45.4% share.

Much more at the link.
Posted by:Chuck

#4  Yeah, I 'spect that's where we're at: the "buh-bye point".

Circling the drain. Death spiral. Cultural and economic suicide. Sure looks to me like my ancestors made the right decision three and a half centuries ago when they flipped Europe the bird and got on that boat for America...

Posted by: Dave D.   2006-01-21 20:09  

#3  "economic patriotism"

Oh yeah, that's the ticket: corporate suicide.

"The total pool of risk capital investment spent in Europe had shrunk by 90 per cent since the height of the information technology boom in 2000."

Thud.

Of course, we can guess what will happen... they'll try to punish companies for this, if they can find a way, instead of "getting it" and giving them reasons to change this trend voluntarily.

Buh-bye.
Posted by: .com   2006-01-21 19:52  

#2  There's a related article today in the Telegraph (UK), Red tape 'turning best firms away from Europe', on a report just issued summarizing Europe's business woes. Bottom line: instead of catching up to America, China and Japan in R&D spending and the creation of innovative new businesses, they're falling even farther behind.

Add that to their depressive demographics and the continuing influx of unassimilatable Muslim immigrant labor, and it looks to me like they're royally fucked.

I don't think these people are going to be much help in the future...

Posted by: Dave D.   2006-01-21 19:36  

#1  So, what is it with liberals?
Can't they retain anything actually, you know, useful?

Must be a congenital brain wiring problem or chemical imbalance. Hundreds of examples that prove that increasing taxation is regressive and economically counter-productive, yet time after time...

So, uh, how much for whackin' Brown?

Cheep. How about .01% of the relative gain over the first 4 years, with a cap at, say, €100M - tax free, of course, lol...
;-)
Posted by: .com   2006-01-21 18:52  

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