I suggested a 33.3% tax rate for all. Going by revenue figures this would bring in some €13bn extra in revenue. It would of course send thousands of low income earners further into poverty as now out of €10,000 income they would have less than €7,000 to survive on, disincentivising thousands from bothering to enter the workforce.
If people get only a basic income but get to keep 2/3s of everything they earn with no limits, how is this disincentivising thousands from bothering to enter the workforce?
33% was your figure not mine. If 33% was the figure, then the 13bn could be spent on raising the basic income amount. The other option would be to reduce the 33% figure to something that breaks even. Again, it would be upto the powers that be.So I suppose the extra €13bn could be used as additional welfare supports for these people?
Which is all well and good until you factor in the cost of living - rent or mortgage, groceries, energy bills, childcare, petrol, motor tax, insurance, house insurance, life assurance, property tax, bin charges etc....not much change (if at all) out of €16,000
My childcare costs €11,000 alone. So it would appear to me that such a system will go from assisting low income earners to get by, to absolutely crushing them. And in turn the whole economy.
You'll find that apart from services provided by the government that prices will fall if income drops.