The Sunday Telegraph

Stay-at-home parents in UK face tougher taxes than elsewhere

- By Camilla Tominey ASSOCIATE EDITOR

FAMILIES with one stay-at-home parent are taxed more in Britain than almost any other advanced country in the world, a report shows.

The research – sent to Jeremy Hunt, the Chancellor, ahead of his March 6 budget – shows that a single-earner, two-child family is treated more harshly by the taxman in the UK than the majority of western economies.

In a global league table of 32 major nations, the UK is ranked 26th, sitting above Finland, Lithuania and Greece. Alongside highly populated wealthy nations such as Germany, the United States, France and Japan, the UK imposes the highest level of taxes on families with a stay-at-home parent.

Using a system of points scoring based on tax treatment of families worldwide, the Czech Republic comes out top with 193 points, followed by Poland with 161. Germany is close with 100 points and the US is well placed with 67 points. The internatio­nal average is 44 points, with the relegation zone headed by the UK on just 3.5 points. Bottom is Greece, which defaulted on a debt of €1.6billion to the IMF in 2015, with minus six points.

The report from the Family Hubs Network (FHN) urges Mr Hunt to start unwinding the country’s tax raid on the family by doubling the marriage allowance in his Budget, which could boost family incomes by an extra £252 a year.

The FHN is also calling for more radical change – ditching the taxation of parents as individual­s and replacing that system with a levy on the overall household income, as many other similar countries already do.

It comes after the FNH conducted a recent survey which found almost 20 per cent of the public would be more likely to vote Conservati­ve at the election if the Chancellor unveiled a genuine “Budget for Families” next month.

The poll found 35 per cent of the public believe cutting taxes for families should be a priority for Mr Hunt. This rises to 55 per cent of parents with children aged under 18.

Miriam Cates, a Tory MP, said: “This timely report is clear that helping families through the tax system would be a hugely popular move ... Supporting families should be a no-brainer for the Conservati­ve Party.”

The report has four key recommenda­tions for the Government, including doubling the maximum value of the Marriage Allowance to £504, to soften further the tax burden faced by families with dependents where one parent earns nothing or significan­tly less than the other. Almost half of the country (49 per cent) would support such a change, according to the poll.

It also calls for an adjustment to Child Benefit, a comprehens­ive review of how families are taxed and more funding for family hubs for the remaining local authority areas.

 ?? SOURCE: FAMILY HUBS NETWORK ??
SOURCE: FAMILY HUBS NETWORK

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