Average and Marginal Tax Rates Flashcards
1
Q
You can calculate Average and Marginal tax rates
A
- An average tax rate is the percentage of some total amount paid as tax. With income tax this = total amount of income tax you pay as a percentage of your total income.
Average income tax rate = total income tax paid/ total income x 100 - A marginal tax rate = the rate of tax you pay on any extra money. For income tax this ‘extra’ is the last £1 you earn - the marginal income tax rate is the rate paid on the last £1 of income.
Marginal income tax rate = rate paid on last £1 of income - In the UK the marginal income tax rate increases as you earn over certain thresholds. It’s only the extra income that’s taxed at the higher rate, not your whole income.
- Here’s an example using hte maringal rates of income tax in the UK for 2016/17:
* look at example in revision book*
2
Q
The Government Spends Tax Revenue on Benefits and Services
A
You need to know where the government gets most of its tax revenue from, and how this revenue is spent.
- Main sources of tax revenue:
- Income tax (30% of central govt tax revenue
- VAT (abt 20%)
- National Insurance payments (abt 20%)
- Excise Duties on goods like alcohol and fuel (abt 10%)
- Corporation tax (abt 8%)
- Council tax and Business rates (paid to local govt) - Main areas of govt expenditure
- Social support including pensions (abt 40%)
- National Health Service (abt 20%)
- Education (abt 15%)
- Debt Interest (abt 7%)
- Police, Law Courts and Prisons (abt 5%)
- Defence (abt 5%)