Friday, April 6, 2012

Livingstone Tax and Hypocrisy = Less NHS

Based on the figures produced by the Ken Livingstone campaign, I believe that the biggest saving he has made is actually in National Insurance Contributions both for himself and his company.

Add to that the shielding of income by then paying the other company shareholder (his wife) through a dividend rather than income and the savings just add-up.

Here is the data from the Ken Livingstone Campaign




2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11
Income from Employment £131,000 £21,645 £5,710 £5,700
Interest Income £16 £137 £18 £33
Dividend Income
£6,667 £55,556 £63,333
Pension Income
£5,242 £21,483 £25,502
Sub Total Income £131,016 £33,691 £82,767 £94,568
Tax on Earned Income £44,122 £4,864 £18,453 £22,691
Tax on Dividends 
£1,260 £10,500 £11,970
Total "Tax" 
£44,122 £6,124 £28,953 £34,661





























The Tax on Dividends figures are 'odd'.  It is not clear what they represent - Income Tax paid on dividends received, in which case they seem very low - or maybe Corporation Tax
paid by Silvetta Ltd.
















































Anyway, let's have a look at these numbers as HMRC would have looked at them and, based on the incomplete data provided, would have presented as a Tax Return calculation.




















2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 Total 2008 to 2011
Income from Employment £131,000 £21,645 £5,710 £5,700 £33,055
Interest Income £16 £137 £18 £33 £188
Dividend Income £0 £6,667 £55,556 £63,333 £125,556
Dividend Tax Credit @ 10%
£667 £5,556 £6,333 £12,556
Pension Income
£5,242 £21,483 £25,502 £52,227
Sub Total Income £131,016 £34,358 £88,323 £100,901 £223,582
Less Personal Allowance £5,225 £6,035 £6,475 £6,475 £18,985
Net Taxable Income £125,791 £28,323 £81,848 £94,426 £204,597
Tax at Basic Rate 10% £223 £0 £0 £0 £0
Tax at next rate 22% or 20% £7,121 £5,405 £5,442 £6,247 £17,094
Tax at Higher Rate £36,476 £0 £0 £0 £0
Tax on Dividends at 32.5%
£2,383 £19,861 £22,642 £44,886
Tax Charged £43,820 £7,788 £25,303 £28,889 £61,980
Less Tax Credit at 10%
£667 £5,556 £6,333 £12,556
Total Tax Due £43,820 £7,122 £19,748 £22,555 £49,425
Effective Rate 33.4% 21.1% 23.9% 23.9% 23.4%




























The Livingstone Campaign have included the year 2007/08 income into the table.
This seems to me to be irrelevant, other than its inclusion makes the overall 'effective
 tax rate' appear higher.  For the whole of that year, Livingstone was employed as
 London Mayor and all information suggests that Silvetta Ltd didn't then exist.  






















Now, let's take a look at what would have happened had Livingstone not declared
dividends but instead had paid the same dividend as income and paid tax through
PAYE, like you or me.
























2007/08 2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 Total 2008 to 2011
Income from Employment £131,000 £28,312 £61,266 £69,033 £158,611
Interest Income £16 £137 £18 £33 £188
Dividend Income £0 £0 £0 £0 £0
Dividend Tax Credit @ 10%
£0 £0 £0 £0
Pension Income
£5,242 £21,483 £25,502 £52,227
Sub Total Income £131,016 £33,691 £82,767 £94,568 £211,026
Less Personal Allowance £5,225 £6,035 £6,475 £6,475 £18,985
Net Taxable Income £125,791 £27,656 £76,292 £88,093 £192,041
Tax at Basic Rate 10% £223 £0 £0 £0 £0
Tax at next rate 22% or 20% £7,121 £5,531 £7,480 £7,480 £20,491
Tax at Higher Rate £36,476 £0 £15,557 £20,277 £35,834
Tax on Dividends at 32.5%
£0 £0 £0 £0
Tax Charged £43,820 £5,531 £23,037 £27,757 £56,325
Less Tax Credit at 10%
£0 £0 £0 £0
Total Tax Due £43,820 £5,531 £23,037 £27,757 £56,325
Effective Rate 33.4% 16.4% 27.8% 29.4% 26.7%

































You will see that for the three years in question, Livingstone saved £6,900.  However, he
and his company then went on to save National Insurance Contributions. Here the
personal and Corporate savings really add-up.  The figure is in excess of £25,000

If these numbers are wrong and someone on the Livingstone campaign wishes to contest
them, there is always the right of reply.  Absent that, I must conclude that the use of
Silvetta Ltd has lowered the tax and NIC take for the UK.  How many NHS employees
or Teachers would £32,000 pay?


























It isn't just the minimizing of tax and NIC payments, when the country is struggling, that sticks
 in the craw.  It is the blatant hypocrisy of someone who castigates others when they do the
same and berates the government for not spending enough (of the money that they gather in
taxes and continue to borrow!!)





















If you like your hypocrisy served with the rankest of flavours - vote Ken.


















If your nose can't stomach the stench, vote for one of the others.

Oh!
That Pension income.  That suggests that Ken would require a pension pot of around  £450 -500,000 to fund it.  This then accumulated while a public servant.  How big is your pot?

Note also, that we haven't seen the accounts of Silvetta Ltd and don't know who is funding them.  Suggestions of Iran TV and Venezuela sometimes surface but as with so much about this, we just aren't being told.

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