The Institute for
Government has today published a report setting out how Boris
Johnson’s government can reform the tax system. Although his
party’s manifesto did not promise such action, the tax system is
in desperate need of reform. The new government’s majority gives
it an opportunity that none has had for the last decade and a
half.
However, major reform
will be controversial and not easy to legislate. To help make
structural changes, the chancellor should set out a clear vision,
seek advice from many sides and go out of his way to win support
for reform. These are among the recommendations of a new IfG
report – How to be a tax-reforming
chancellor – released today, which draws on interviews
with former chancellors, other former Treasury ministers and
former senior civil servants.
The Institute
recommends that the chancellor should:
-
Set out a clear
vision for the tax system
to give taxpayers more clarity, help explain to the public why
sometimes contentious changes are needed and help resist the
pressure to tinker.
-
Seek advice,
look at the evidence and take implementation concerns
seriously. The tax system is complicated and few people – even
experienced professional advisers – have a good sense of how
the whole system works in practice.
-
Communicate more with the public and
media to tackle myths and
promote discussion of the problems and the need for
reform.
-
Involve other Cabinet
ministers in the
development of tax policy – particularly where it interacts
with other policies – to avoid unintended consequences and
ensure that tax is the right tool to use.
-
Build
support for contentious
changes by making a persuasive case to the public for change,
and packaging reforms together to show the benefits that are
made possible by unpopular changes.
-
Carefully consider whether
the benefits of acting early might be outweighed by other
costs. Previous chancellors have announced major tax
changes early on in the life of a new Parliament to take
advantage of the government’s political capital, to give time
for resentment to fade and benefits to be appreciated. But
acting quickly may allow too little time for consultation or
explanation.
Gemma Tetlow, chief economist at the Institute for
Government and lead author of the report,
said:
“The government’s first priority will be to enact
Brexit. But the election result gives the chancellor the
opportunity over the next five years to enact much-needed reform
of the tax system to address its weaknesses and ensure that it
can keep pace with economic trends. Many residents of No.11
Downing Street have endeavoured to be ‘tax-reforming
chancellors’, but it has proved difficult in practice. To give
himself the best chance of success, he should set out a clear
vision for the tax system, seek a broad range of advice, and
actively make the case for his proposed
reforms.”