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How your tax money is being spent


Updated on 03 November 2014 | 0 Comments

Tax summaries to be sent out to 24 million workers

More than 24 million people can expect to receive a notification from HM Revenue & Customs, explaining exactly how their tax money was spent by the State in 2013/14.

The letters are being sent out from today, a move which the Government claims will help make taxation more 'transparent'.

The recipients are made up of the eight million taxpayers who complete self-assesssment returns, and the 16 million PAYE taxpayers who received a coding notice for the last tax year.

Your tax statement

Examples of the new personal tax summaries are available to view on the Treasury website. Your statement, should you receive one, will show you your taxable income, tax free allowance, and a breakdown of how much of your tax was spent on welfare, health, education and so on.

There are almost 30 million taxpayers in the UK, so if you don’t receive a tax statement from HMRC, you can use the online calculator to estimate your tax bill and see how your money was used by the Government. 

Chancellor George Osborne said that the statements “represent a huge boost for tax transparency, showing people very clearly how much tax they pay and giving them a better understanding of where their money is spent”.

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Breaking it down further

One major issue with the summaries is that they do not break down the category of ‘welfare’ into its component parts. This encompasses money spent on child benefit, jobseeker’s allowance and expenditure on sick and disabled people, among other costs.

Critics are arguing that the way information is being presented in the tax summaries is not detailed enough because of the way it lumps all welfare payments together.

Dame Anne Begg, Chair of the Commons Work and Pensions Committee, was quoted in The Guardian as saying that her Committee had been “very critical of the way the Government, usually the DWP, presents its information about welfare, which gives people the impression the bulk of welfare goes to working-age unemployed people when in reality that is a very small proportion”.

Recent figures from the Treasury show that over £10 billion was spent on Employment and Support Allowance across Great Britain in the 2013/14 tax year. This is given to people who cannot work due to illness or disability. The cost of Disability Living Allowance totalled nearly £14 billion (this allowance is in the process of being replaced by Personal Independence Payments).

In comparison, the bill for jobseeker’s allowance was below £4.5 billion and housing benefits around £24 billion.

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