... in Spain and the United Kingdom in the chart below. Every time we talk more about this in the context of tax increases. That failure to renew the Bush cuts in the U.S., if the new leader of Labour in the UK (my former minister) supported the indefinite continuation of the new section of the 5th% for those earning over 150,000 pounds annually, which if income tax rises in Spain ...
seems incredible that in a matter of so little interest both people have a clear idea of \u200b\u200bthe basic numbers. The memory tax aministración presents the data for Spain and these pictures of HM Customs and Revenue presents for the United Kingdom.
What has piqued my curiosity is Tertulia Digital Economic Freedom, where Alberto Recarte said yesterday that taxpayers who earn over 120,000 per year (10% of total), contributing 40% from the collection of income tax. Recarte rarely wrong, but here it has. 10% of taxpayers who earn more are those with incomes over 40,500 euros per year and represent more than half of the collection. Those earning more than 120,000 euros are less than 1% of taxpayers, but represent 18% of the collection.
I guess when someone wins as much as Recarte is normal to forget how we won the rest of us and commit these errors.
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