Responding, MP, Chief Secretary to the
Treasury, said:
“This proposal is yet another tax rise from a party that already
wants to hike taxes to their highest level in peacetime history.
It would make it harder for local businesses to take on staff and
pay them a good wage.
“We have cut income tax for over 30 million workers, introduced a
National Living Wage to give over 1.6 million people a pay rise,
helped businesses cut unemployment to its lowest level since the
1970s, as well as introducing measures to increase employee share
ownership.
“Only the Conservatives will make the economy work for everyone,
where people can get in on life and be rewarded for their hard
work.”
ENDS
For further information, please contact the Conservative Party
Press Office on 020 7984 8121.
Notes to Editors
Labour voted against our plans to increase employee
share ownership.
-
· Labour
voted against our measures to increase employee share
ownership. At the 2013 Budget, we announced a
capital gains tax exemption for employee shareholder shares and
extra funding to support employee ownership. Labour MPs,
including and , voted against the Finance
Act 2013 at Second Reading (on 15 April 2013)
(HMT, Finance Bill Explanatory
Notes, link;
Hansard,Division 201, 15 April 2013, link).
Labour would break another promise not to raid
businesses… again.
-
· Labour
promised not to raise corporation tax for small businesses but
their manifesto contained a pledge to hike the small profits rate
to 21 per cent. Speaking to the Federation of Small
Businesses, Corbyn said ‘When I say any tax rises will fall on
the broadest shoulders, I want to make it clear today that we
will not raise the small business corporation tax rate’ (Jeremy
Corbyn, Speech to FSB, 11 April, 2017, link; Labour
press, 10 May 2017, link).
-
· Labour’s
plans would break their own promise to keep corporation tax
‘among the lowest of the major developed
economies’. Labour promised to keep Corporation Tax
among the lowest but on top of their rise to 26 per cent, the
additional contribution would make corporation tax the second
highest in the G7 (The , Funding Britain’s
Future, p.6, link; The Financial
Times, 11 September 2018, link; OCED
Statistics, Table II.1 Statutory corporate income tax
rate, accessed 11 September 2018, link).
Labour’s policy would actually end up harming
people.
-
· Labour’s
renationalisation plans would slash existing share ownership with
ordinary hardworking people losing out. A third of
employees in United Utilities participate in their employee share
scheme, as do two thirds of South West Water employees and 70 per
cent of Severn Trent’s UK employees. Furthermore, the BT pension
scheme owns a significant share (13 per cent) of Thames Water
while a conglomerate of Local Government pension schemes hold a
15 per cent share of Anglian water. Renationalising these
industries would place those investments at risk (Social Market
Foundation, The cost of nationalising the water industry
in England, February 2018, link.).
-
· has previously suggested
Labour could renationalise industries without compensation to
shareholders. said that: ‘Parliament
will determine whether or not we provide compensation and on
what scale’ (Financial Times, 18 February
2018,link).
-
· Whilst
has criticised employee
share ownership as merely ‘sweetening’ the pill for
privatisation. said: ‘The coalition is
privatising the postal services as a whole and trying to
sweeten the pill with employee share ownerships’ (Morning
Star, 12 January 2011, link).
Labour’s plans would hand their union paymasters
additional powers.
-
· Labour’s
current plans aren’t about levelling the playing fields it’s
about putting the power in the hands of their union
paymasters. A report from the far-left New Economic
Foundation suggested that unions would have considerable control
over ‘a worker controlled fund’ which businesses would contribute
towards. The report said: ‘We also recommend a ‘heartbeat’ policy
we call an Inclusive Ownership Fund, which would either compel
or strongly incentivise (or both) all shareholder- or
larger privately-owned businesses to deposit a small, annual
share of profits in the form of equity into a worker-controlled
fund… and other stakeholders in decision making and, in
particular, in determining purpose’ (New Economics
Foundation, Co-Operatives Unleashed, p.4, 3
July 2018, link).
-
· Labour
have already made clear their intentions to do the biddings of
the unions, with reiterating his support
for the Institute for Employment Right’s manifesto calling for
a return to ‘secondary picketing’. ‘McDonnell
held the Manifesto during his speech and spoke on how the IER's
recommendations have helped to shape Labour policy’
(Institute of Employment Rights, 5 June
2018, link).