Menu
Tue, 23 April 2024

Newsletter sign-up

Subscribe now
The House Live All
Communities
How do we fix the UK’s poor mental health and wellbeing challenge? Partner content
Health
Communities
Mobile UK warns that the government’s ambitions for widespread adoption of 5G could be at risk Partner content
Economy
Environment
Press releases

Top 1% of taxpayers are increasingly only men based in London, says 'shocking' research

2 min read

The top 1% of taxpayers are increasingly just men based in London and the South East, according to new research branded “shocking” by Labour.


The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) claims to have found “the extraordinary scale of the gulf between the merely well off and the very richest”, using data from income tax records.

The analysis reveals that more than half of the top 1% live in London and the South East, with more than a third in London alone. 

And they are becoming more and more concentrated in these small areas, with half of them living in just 65 parliamentary constituencies in 2014-15, down from 78 in 2000–01.

Labour’s Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell said it was “yet another sign of how Tory governments have encouraged the super-rich to concentrate in those regions while the rest of the country is held back”.

To be in the top 1% of income tax payers in London requires an income of over £300,000 a year, three times what it takes to be in the top 1% for Wales, the North East and Northern Ireland.

The IFS says there also remains a huge gender disparity, with men making up 83% of the top 1% of income tax payers and 89% of the top 0.1%.

Robert Joyce from the economic think tank, and one of the authors of the report, said the “geographic and demographic concentration may be one reason why many of those on high incomes don’t realise quite how much higher their incomes are than the average”.

He added: “What many people will want to know is how some people have such high incomes.

“For example, do those earning hundreds of thousands of pounds a year derive such rewards from innovations and activities that benefit all of us, or are they exploiting market power at the expense of workers on lower incomes?

“These are among the key questions that the IFS Deaton Review of inequalities, which we recently kicked off, will look to address.” 

Mr McDonnell added: “A massive proportion of the top 1% live in London and the South East, and it’s yet another sign of how Tory governments have encouraged the super-rich to concentrate in those regions while the rest of the country is held back.

“It’s shocking that so many of the top 1% are getting tax advantages, as partners and business owners, and we’re going to get more help for the very wealthiest from this Boris Johnson-led government of bankers.”

PoliticsHome Newsletters

PoliticsHome provides the most comprehensive coverage of UK politics anywhere on the web, offering high quality original reporting and analysis: Subscribe

Read the most recent article written by Alain Tolhurst - Liz Truss Doubts Slowing Down Would Have Saved Her From "Establishment Forces"

Tags

Economy

Categories

Economy
Podcast
Engineering a Better World

The Engineering a Better World podcast series from The House magazine and the IET is back for series two! New host Jonn Elledge discusses with parliamentarians and industry experts how technology and engineering can provide policy solutions to our changing world.

NEW SERIES - Listen now