The Mirrlees Review of tax system has now been published. From the IFS Press release
"In the deepest and most far reaching analysis of the UK tax system in
more than 30 years, the Mirrlees Review puts the case for radical tax
reform. It shows how the current system is inefficient, overly complex and
frequently unfair. And it sets out a range of proposals designed to
increase output and welfare.
Government, through the tax system, takes around £4 in every £10
earned in the economy. It is not surprising that getting tax design wrong
can be hugely costly. Yet the level and quality of debate on tax policy is
inadequate; there has rarely been any clear sense of direction from
governments; and expensive and damaging mistakes have been all too
common.
In the UK poor tax design contributes to an inefficient housing market,
distortionary taxation of financial services, excessive reliance on debt
finance, employment levels lower than they need be and distorted and
inefficient savings and investment decisions. The review sets out a long
term strategy for reform, and in doing so speaks to immediate policy
priorities."
http://www.ifs.org.uk/pr/mirrlees_sept11.pdfInterestingly, much of the UK press coverage relating to the publication of the report has centred on the 50% marginal tax rate with headlines of "50p top tax rate 'won't raise any extra revenue' warns influential think tank" Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2036148/50p-tax-rate-wont-raise-extra-revenue-warns-Institute-Fiscal-Studies though the Guardian focuses more on expenditure "George Osborne given stark warning on cuts' impact -Institute for Fiscal Studies says chancellor's plan will cause 10% drop in family living standards" with reference to a different report. (The IFS analysis is included in The Great Recession and the Distribution of Income, published on Monday (12 Sept) by the London School of Economics.
http://www.ifs.org.uk/pr/frdb_recession.pdfFull Taxation reports
http://www.ifs.org.uk/mirrleesReview/designhttp://www.ifs.org.uk/mirrleesReview/dimensions