عاجل
DEWM-Achtelfinale: Balogun darf gegen Belgien spielen – Martínez hört aufINTLMaine Senate Candidate Graham Platner Faces Calls to Withdraw After Sexual Assault AllegationsBRItamaraty vê 'risco' de EUA usarem 'força militar' contra o Brasil após PCC e CV serem declarados terroristasBRHomem é preso com medicamentos contrabandeados em ônibus em Angatuba (SP)ARاكتشاف جهاز تنصت في منزل مؤسس المنتدى الاقتصادي العالمي كلاوس شوابARSlutsky: NATO's anti-Russian hysteria is at an unprecedented levelRUРоссийские А-50У сбили украинские ракеты «Фламинго»BRHomem é assassinado a tiros em residência no GuamáCNNorway Urges China to Use Influence on Russia for Ukraine PeaceBRReceita Federal apreende mais de 440 kg de cocaína em SantosDEWM-Achtelfinale: Balogun darf gegen Belgien spielen – Martínez hört aufINTLMaine Senate Candidate Graham Platner Faces Calls to Withdraw After Sexual Assault AllegationsBRItamaraty vê 'risco' de EUA usarem 'força militar' contra o Brasil após PCC e CV serem declarados terroristasBRHomem é preso com medicamentos contrabandeados em ônibus em Angatuba (SP)ARاكتشاف جهاز تنصت في منزل مؤسس المنتدى الاقتصادي العالمي كلاوس شوابARSlutsky: NATO's anti-Russian hysteria is at an unprecedented levelRUРоссийские А-50У сбили украинские ракеты «Фламинго»BRHomem é assassinado a tiros em residência no GuamáCNNorway Urges China to Use Influence on Russia for Ukraine PeaceBRReceita Federal apreende mais de 440 kg de cocaína em Santos
Newsgather
BackMillionaires' tax willingness needs policy conversion
Millionaires' tax willingness needs policy conversion
سياسة
Guardian Business17.05.2026سياسة2 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

Millionaires' tax willingness needs policy conversion

نظرة سريعة

  • A report indicates three-quarters of UK millionaires would pay more tax.
  • The author argues for an opt-out "solidarity tax surcharge" to convert willingness into revenue, citing behavioural research on opt-in vs. opt-out systems.

ملخص مُنشأ بالذكاء الاصطناعي

لماذا يهم

A report found that three-quarters of UK millionaires would pay more tax. This comes at a time when the Labour party faces pressure to fund public services and counter anti-tax populism. The author suggests that current voluntary tax payment systems are ineffective.

حجم الخط

The finding that three-quarters of UK millionaires say they would be willing to pay more tax (Report, 13 May) is politically significant at a time when Labour faces growing pressure both to fund public services and to defend progressive policies against rising anti-tax populism. However, the crucial question is not what people say in surveys, but how policy converts stated willingness into actual revenue.

The Treasury’s standard response is that wealthy individuals can already make voluntary payments to HMRC. Yet the sums raised remain negligible. This is entirely predictable, because behavioural research repeatedly shows that opt-in systems produce dramatically lower participation than opt-out systems – the core principle behind so-called nudge theory. Successive UK governments have already relied heavily on the latter approach in areas ranging from pension auto-enrolment to organ donation frameworks.

I once suggested to the Treasury via my MP an “opt-out solidarity tax surcharge” for those above the highest income or wealth thresholds. Not entirely unexpectedly, I received the same response about existing voluntary payments. However, as far as I could tell, the key behavioural point was missed: participation rises sharply when contribution is the default position rather than requiring active enrolment.

Critics may dislike the fact that participation would remain technically voluntary. However, existing taxes would remain fully compulsory and progressive, while the tax surcharge would apply automatically unless individuals confidentially chose to opt out in their tax returns. The relevant comparison is not between this and an imaginary world of perfect tax compliance. It is between securing additional contributions from many wealthy individuals, or securing nothing at all while increasing incentives for avoidance, relocation and political backlash.

I believe that in politically challenging times, ideas that combine behavioural realism with fiscal pragmatism deserve closer consideration.

James Kyle

Ealing, London

Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

ما الذي يجب مراقبته

توقعات الذكاء الاصطناعي — احتمالات وليست حقائق

  • The Labour party may consider implementing policies similar to an 'opt-out solidarity tax surcharge' if faced with persistent funding challenges for public services.

    محتمل · خلال أشهر

أسئلة مفتوحة

  • What is the specific amount of revenue that could be generated by an 'opt-out solidarity tax surcharge'?
  • What would be the administrative costs and complexities of implementing such a surcharge?
  • How would the 'opt-out' mechanism be designed to ensure confidentiality and prevent political backlash?
  • What is the Labour party's current stance on implementing new tax policies for the wealthy?

مواضيع ذات صلة

This article was originally published by Guardian Business.

أخبار ذات صلة

المزيد حول هذا الموضوعtaxation