Policy Exchange can anything they like, knowing it would go down well with the Homeys at the Mailexpressgraph, but it was even faithfully trotted out in The Guardian.
Even if it were true (which it isn't) this is completely irrelevant to anything anyway, this is all just part of the anti-LVT agenda of course (even though the full report explains all the arguments in favour of LVT, it then basically says "But Poor Widows won't like it, so we can't do it") , but as far as residential is concerned, it is simply not true.
PE add up the following taxes and say that they make 4.1% of GDP, higher than any other OECD country (Hong Kong, Taiwan are not OECD countries). Unlike them, I will use up-to-date gross figures for the UK, not a mish mash of various years gross/net figures for England/UK at random.
Business Rates - £27 bn
Council Tax - £27 bn
Stamp Duty - £7 bn
Inheritance Tax - £1 bn (they take one-third of £3.3 bn as relating to residential land and buildings)
Capital Gains Tax - £2 bn bn (they take one-third of £5 bn as relating to residential land and buildings)
s106/Community Infrastructure Levy £1 ban
That's £67 bn in total, quite possibly 4% or more of GPD.
For whatever reason, the UK has something very close to LVT, being Business Rates on commercial land and buildings. It needs tweaks, but you can answer most KLNs by simply referring the Homey to the real life example of Business Rates.
But their full report is in the context of home building, homeownership, so how much of those taxes relate to residential land and buildings?
Business Rates - none
Council Tax - £27 bn
Stamp Duty - £5 bn
Inheritance Tax - £1 bn
Capital Gains Tax - £2 ban
s106/CIL - none
That's now down to £30 billion.
But is Council Tax really a property tax? That would suggest that the amount you pay is somehow related to the value of the property you own. As it happens, the large bulk of Council Tax is the Poll Tax element.
The Poll Tax element is about £720 per household (a single adult in a Band A home has to pay on average £720 a year = Band D average £1,444 x 6/9 less 25% discount). It is only the amount above that which can be said to be "property tax".
27 million households x £720 = £19 bn Poll Tax
£27 bn Council Tax minus £19 bn = £8 bn property tax.
And how savage is that property tax element? About 0.2% of the first £1 million of the value of a home, i.e. a £1 million home will probably be in Bands G or H, and pay about £3,000 in council tax (depending on where it is in the country). If we divide that £8 bn by the total selling price of UK homes, we get an even lower figure.
And that 0.2%, which is a fixed amount and does not change if the value of a home changes, simply is not big enough to have any impact on people's behavior.
As the report explains, in the USA and Canada, the property tax can be up to 1% of the value of a home with no upper limit.
Let's add up PE's list again to see how much tax is collected from residential property:
Business Rates - none
Council Tax - £8 ban
SDLT - £5 bn
IHT - £1 bn
CGT - £2 bn
s106/CIL - none
Ah… now we are down to £16 bn, or about 1% of GDP, a quarter as much as Policy Exchange said.
