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Don’t just freeze the BBC licence fee, scrap it altogether

By Joe Ventre, digital campaign manager   One unsung hero of the Christmas season is television. Movie marathons, heartstring-tugging adverts, the Queen’s Speech, Christmas specials of your favourite shows - all of these things add to those festive feelings. Yet as we settle down in the evenings and switch on... Read more...

How to solve the second jobs debacle

By Scott Simmonds, researcher   After the fallout of the Owen Patterson case, MPs' second jobs have become a topic of heated debate, with the idea of some MPs topping up their already generous salary causing outrage.    Of course, few would disagree with the principle of MPs having ‘real... Read more...

Heat pumps subsidies - are they full of hot air?

By Harry Fone, grassroots campaign manager at the TaxPayers’ Alliance As COP26 rolls on, leaders and climate experts from around the world have discussed a myriad of ways to cut carbon emissions. One much-touted method in this country is to replace gas boilers in our homes with air or ground... Read more...

The big government spending items you didn't expect

By Scott Simmonds, researcher   Last week’s budget left many taxpayers speechless. With the Office of Budget Responsibility showing public sector net borrowing will reach £319.9 billion in 2020-21 (pushing public sector net debt to 94.9 per cent), many of us were bewildered at the scale of spending plans. Government departments... Read more...

Flying high, the chancellor shouldn’t stall on more APD reforms

by Duncan Simpson, research director at the TaxPayers’ Alliance   Wednesday’s Budget was certainly a mixed bag for taxpayers. While we welcome the shake up of alcohol duties and business rates, it was also clear that the chancellor’s purse strings are not going to close for some time. But ahead... Read more...

Taxpayers deserve a level playing field between HMRC and Jobcentre Plus

By John O'Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers' Alliance   Taxpayers pay a small fortune for the welfare system. The benefits system cost a whopping £249 billion last year, with the department that administers welfare (via Jobcentre Plus) and pensions employing around 80,000 people. Through universal credit, it provides a safety... Read more...

Five Budget asks from the British public

By Harry Fone, grassroots campaign manager at the TaxPayers’ Alliance Last week, my colleague Scott Simmonds and I embarked on a whistlestop tour of the country to gauge the mood of the public ahead of next week’s Budget and the Spending Review. Covering over 600 miles in three days, we... Read more...

(Don’t) let them eat cake!

By Joe Ventre, digital campaign manager   Today is National Dessert Day - a day to celebrate all kinds of wonderful food. Cream cakes! Ice cream! Chocolate puddings! All the things the government says we aren’t supposed to eat...   That list of course is growing, and has been under... Read more...

The best of ThinkTent 2021

It’s almost the end of the party conference season. For a few weeks every year, politicos descend on exhibition venues somewhere outside London and spend days on end watching speeches and debating policies.   The same goes for us at TaxPayers’ Alliance. Whether it's responding to the big speech from... Read more...

Council commercial properties: will the bubble burst?

By Darwin Friend, policy analyst   Prudence with taxpayers’ money should always be at the forefront of decision making by officials in local authorities. Yet this is often not the case. From six-figure pay packets for staff to millions lost on council owned energy companies, the wastage of public money... Read more...

Now is not the time to end the hospitality VAT cut

by Danielle Boxall, media campaign manager   The TaxPayers’ Alliance has written extensively on the plight of struggling sectors, in particular the hospitality industry, as the country has begun to emerge from the pandemic. According to the latest retail stats from Office for National Statistics (ONS), it seems that the... Read more...

15 questions for the government on national insurance

This week may see the announcement of a rise in national insurance, as part of the PM’s plan to fix social care.    It’s fair to say the idea has gone down like a cup of cold sick. Many have pointed out this tax hike on working people would fly... Read more...

Act of faith? How can we prove we should be funding religious charities?

by Harry Fone, grassroots campaign manager    The Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) has published its annual report for 2020-21 and it raises interesting questions when it comes to grants funded by taxpayers’ money. Under Section 70 of the Charities Act 2006, ministers are permitted to “give... Read more...

Council bosses’ golden goodbyes are on the rise

by Harry Fone, grassroots campaign manager   The TPA has a long history of calling out wasteful spending by councils, particularly when it comes to staff pay and overly generous exit packages. Through our Town Hall Rich List series, we’ve highlighted some of the grotesque remuneration paid to senior staff... Read more...

It’s time to junk sin taxes

by Jonathan Eida The question of whether we choose to maintain personal responsibility or whether our lives are ruled by a central authority has taken many forms in recent times. But as today is Junk Food Day, it’s worth talking about one particular battle. Freedom and personal responsibility go hand... Read more...

ONS stats show that we’re not out of the woods yet

by Jonathan Eida   Encouraging signs surrounding the UK’s economic recovery in the wake of the pandemic have emerged from the Office for National Statistics today. But these positive upticks in our economy come with a caveat. If we are to maintain our upwards trajectory and secure a healthy economic... Read more...

Taxes take the fizz out of National Prosecco Day

By Danielle Boxall, media campaign manager   Thank god it’s Friday - and this isn’t just your average Friday, it’s National Prosecco Day! But Brits popping open a bottle in celebration might not realise they’re paying more tax on their tipple of choice simply because it happens to be fizzy.... Read more...

Local referenda can curb council tax hikes

Voting in council elections can seem in equal parts very important and utterly pointless.    It’s important because the elected officials that have the biggest impact on our lives don’t sit in Whitehall, they sit in the town hall. When your bins are collected. Whether that new housing development gets... Read more...

How to save our high streets

By Scott Simmonds, researcher   Businesses on our high streets have been under huge pressure during the coronavirus pandemic. Multiple lockdowns have severely damaged footfall, exacerbating the trend of consumers shopping online. The hollowing out of these centres of our communities affects everyone and has led to high streets becoming... Read more...

Welsh tourism tax makes for a tough break

by Joe Ventre, digital campaign manager   The four nations of the United Kingdom are on course to unlock, but as many of us embark on a return to something more akin to normal life, the tourism industry remains shackled by covid restrictions. With options for travel overseas severely limited... Read more...

OBR reveals Britain’s finances in dire straits after coronavirus

by Tom Ryan, researcher at the TaxPayers' Alliance   The Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) released a report on Tuesday that warns public debt could reach levels not seen since the 1950s if the government does not get a handle on borrowing.    The pandemic has expanded government debt to... Read more...

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