stats count Workers to be hit in the pocket with employers passing on £25bn National Insurance tax raid – Meer Beek

Workers to be hit in the pocket with employers passing on £25bn National Insurance tax raid


MILLIONS of workers are braced for a pay squeeze after Rachel Reeves launched a tax raid on firms.

The Chancellor insisted her Budget would protect the nation’s employees as per Labour’s manifesto.

a person is holding a bunch of money in their hands
Millions of workers are braced for a pay squeeze
a woman holding a red briefcase that says chancellor of the exchequer
PA

Rachel Reeves delivered her first Budget today[/caption]

a poster titled budget at a glance with icons on it

But top economists warned her National Insurance hike on bosses would ultimately be felt by their staff in reduced wage rises. 

The Institute for Fiscal studies said: “Somebody will pay for the higher taxes – largely working people.”

Today Ms Reeves said she was raising the headline employer rate of National Insurance from 13.8 to 15 per cent.

To groans from Opposition MPs, she also announced a reduction to the threshold business start paying NICs from £9,100 to £5,000.

It will raise £25billion – the equivalent of around £800 per employee for each firm.

The “trick and treat” Halloween package included:

For weeks Labour has insisted this would not break a flagship election pledge not to raise the rates of income tax, National Insurance and VAT on working people.

Ms Reeves insisted to MPs: “Working people will not see higher taxes in their payslips as a result of the choices I make today. That is a promise made – and a promise fulfilled.”

But Paul Johnson, director of the IFS, said working people will still pay the price.

He said: “The OBR suggests that three quarters of the impact of employer NICs will be felt by employees, even if the changes don’t show up on payslips.

“Indeed, these tax rises partly explain why the OBR has downgraded its projections for real household income growth over the next few years.

“Somebody will pay for the higher taxes – largely working people.

“The employer NICs rise will further increase the incentive for employers to switch to contracting with the self-employed.”

Announcing the NICs sting on bosses, Ms Reeves said: “I know that this is a difficult choice. I do not take this decision lightly.”

Defiant Ms Reeves said: “We are asking business to contribute more and I know that there will be impacts of this measure felt beyond businesses, too as the OBR have set out today.

“But in the circumstances that I have inherited, it is the right choice to make. Successful businesses depend on successful schools.

“Healthy businesses depend on a healthy NHS. And a strong economy depends on strong public finances.

“If the party opposite chooses to oppose this choice, then they are choosing more austerity, more chaos and more instability. That is the choice our country faces too.”

The Halloween package included a raft of treats – including a cut to pub beer prices, and hikes in the minimum wage and state pension.

But it also clobbers millions with tricky tax hikes that Ms Reeves said would fund a spending spree on services like the NHS.

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