Fixing the economy... sheesh well not by increasing taxation further at the moment.
There is a fundamental problem with lower paid jobs not being worth doing due to it not being worthwhile due to the taper on benefits. Lack of training for practical roles, lack of protection for small businesses such as against energy rises and employers costs imposed by taxation also means a shortage of skilled trades.
We are in an unsustainable situation that has mortgaged our future against our present workforce. Work needs to be worth doing. As for our professions, for crying out loud fix the pension situation for public services- fire, police, NHS, and the judiciary. I cannot understate how messed up this is and how it impacts everyone who relies on these.
Ok so:
1: Fix the benefits - employment taper - even though this has been improved, it still means very little gain for working more than 14 hours for someone on living wage:
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/content/uploads/2022/02/MDR-charts.png So taper much more slowly - it's 55% at the moment on top of tax - I'd change it to 20%
2: I'm not a fan of labour policy as a whole, but I was on record before all of the announcements that fixing our energy reliance and green industry is the way to go: Would build industries that can export as well, builds skills, manufacturing capacity, and energy independence.
3: Free trade agreement with Europe - just get on with it.
4: Student loan repayment incentivised for working in public services: For every £1 paid from a public service role, pay off £1.10 of your student loan. Incentivises support of care, health, police, fire, civil service roles.
5. Pensions: get rid of the triple lock - it's not fair on everyone else when times are hard. The tax threshold doesn't need changing just the daft way it's calculated and tiered for public services.
6. Profits taxed on basis of location of purchaser - so profits made from transactions in the UK are taxed in the UK - would encourage US businesses to have bases in the UK to avoid double taxation with the US global taxation rules - and should balance some of the measures above.
7. Ok I said not more taxation, but a 50% rate over £300K a year seems fair.
Do I get to be PM now?