Dally wrote:I read the other day that since the onset of the financial crisis the better off elements of society have paid disproportionately more of the costs than others and been the hardest hit.
A totally meaningless statement when you don't define what is meant by "better off".
My view is the top 1% who earn more than £150K have not been affected at all given the cut in income tax to 45%.
Take small amount away from the less well off and some will be plunged into poverty or face real hardship. Take a large amount off the wealthy and they are still wealthy. You'd have to be talking punitive levels of tax and cuts to hit the better off to the extent it would hit them that hard, not giving them a tax break.
They may lose child benefit and other things but they won't really notice.
Quote: We have just reached the turning point and the less well off will pick up the tab over the next 5+ years as austerity starts to take hold.
It is certainly true austerity is just starting to take hold but it isn't a turning point. It was the plan all along that the plebs pay.