cover image: Capital Losses: Why increasing CGT will deter investment, slow growth and reduce revenue

Capital Losses: Why increasing CGT will deter investment, slow growth and reduce revenue

24 Oct 2024

George Osbourne introduced a higher rate of 28% in 2010, before cutting the higher rate to 20% in 2016 and the lower rate to 10%.1 Capital gains tax today CGT is applied to the difference between the price you bought an asset for and the price you sell it for. [...] For example, academics at the Centre for the Analysis of Taxation, Arun Advani and Andy Summers, argue that, for the top 1% of taxpayers, the share of income from capital gains is rising.13 The lower rate of CGT makes the taxation of total remuneration (gains + income) less progressive. [...] However, if the purpose of the acquisition is to renovate the property and then sell it on at a profit, this is a trading transaction, and the profit is assessable to Income Tax. [...] The imposition of CGT means that the present value of that income is being taxed when the stock is sold, and the future income will also be taxed. [...] This increase, which took place when a tax increase was passed for the following years, was evidence of the magnitude of transitory realizations responses and contributed further to concerns about the reflection of transitory responses in the econometric studies.’ In general, the economic literature agrees that there is a major short-term response to an announced tax rise.

Authors

Daniel Herring

Related Organizations

Pages
16
Published in
United Kingdom

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