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A discredited system

Posted: 09 June 2005 | Subscribe Online


Given New Labour's penchant for replacing functional systems with experimental alternatives, its determination to stick with the ailing tax credits system is starting to look like bloody-mindedness.

New figures show that about 5.6 million families received tax credits during 2003-4, of whom 45 per cent received the wrong amount. These figures look extraordinarily bad, but they are a consequence of the Inland Revenue's long-established practice of making a rough guess on entitlement one year, and then clawing back any excess from payments in the following year.
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This system does little harm to businesses. But for families on the poverty line, Gordon Brown's brainchild has generated a damaging cycle of boom and bust. Inland Revenue overpayments have left 1.9 million families repaying an average of £1,000 each. The repayments are often debited from future tax credits, which drastically reduces a family's income, often without warning.

And while it may be tempting to conclude that the families concerned should have been more prudent, if you are constantly robbing Peter to pay Paul just to keep the lights on and food on the table, the reality is that you spend what you have coming in.
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Unfortunately, the chaos will continue as long as the tax credit system is run by the Inland Revenue - or its new incarnation, HM Revenue and Customs. The other option - favoured by many - is a universal family benefit, set at adequate levels. How about that for an experimental alternative?


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