Stevo 666
Über Member
I'm not an economist, but your figures look about right to my eye. Points to notice though ...
* Increased NI sends money to the government's second account which is ring-fenced in law to pay pensions and benefits. The only permitted exception is to top up the NHS (currently thought to be about 18% of its budget).
* Government can borrow from the secondary account in times of emergency but must pay it back - hence the war chest claims.
* Employer's NI is tax deductable. Therefore at current rates, employers pay 75% of the increase rather than 100%.
* Therefore this means less corporation tax going to the general account - so a shortfall.
* There's plenty of money in the second account, so the government can easily afford to pay NHS pay demands - they just don't want to.
* Paying NHS workers more will help correct the imbalance due to the 'virtuous fiscal circle' that successive governments pretend doesn't exist - paying NHS workers more, brings increased PAYE money to the general account, NI payments back to the second account, and other taxation such as VAT back to the general account. This will also assist growth.
* The boats is misdirection. Successive governments have pandered to populism - they maintain levels for scapegoating purposes.
Can you show us a link to this 'second account' you refer to?
Also, how is borrowing from this 'second account' different from regular government borrowing?