
By Sarah Hayward / @Sarah_Hayward
Don't get me wrong, I love the Robin Hood Tax. It's a great idea, an extension of the Tobin tax to cover all inter-bank transactions without touching retail transactions is seemingly brilliant. And if the campaign has got their numbers right, then a rich seam of tax income has been identified in a time of economic hardship and challenged public finances. Hurrah! It's perfect!
So why am I complaining?
The blooming name. Who in God's name thought it was sensible to brand a tax after someone who's most famous for robbing people? (That and leading a band of merry men and, latterly, tight wearing - but that's for another time). Some of us on the left might sneakily love the idea of 'stealing from the rich to give to the poor' - but it's still stealing, isn't it.
Tax isn't theft. It's a mechanism for Governments to collect money from people, businesses, property, etc, to pay for specific services or change behaviours. With a tax, if we don't like paying it or don't like the services provided in exchange for it we can exercise our democratic right and vote out the Government. And because I am lucky enough to hold a British passport I can even chose to up sticks and move to another country with different taxes for different services.
If I have my purse robbed, in, say - to pluck a completely random example - a Camden pub by a drug addict, a few days before I'm due to fly to Cuba, there's not much in protest or voting terms I can do to rectify that situation. I cancel my cards, I call the police, I argue with the bank about getting replacement cards in time for my holiday and feel drained by and, more importantly, am completely powerless over the whole experience.
This point - although some will argue it's simply one of presentation - is hugely important to me. The debate about tax in this country most often centres around how wastefully it's spent (often not true) and how to cut it, not what value we as individuals and communities get out of it. The majority of the mainstream media, the Conservatives and to a lesser extent the Lib Dems present public services and expenditure of taxpayers' money as almost universally wasteful and, yes, equate it to theft in the language they chose to use. Presenting any new tax as a theft (which is exactly how the Daily Mail chose to cover the Robin Hood Tax), plays in to the hands of the right wing agenda for the state to provide as little as possible in terms of public services and leave people to fend for themselves on health, childcare, education, crime and justice - you name it.
I don't support collecting any more taxes than is necessary for the level of services that we as a society chose to provide, and every tax chould be justified to the payer, but I do know damn well I would chose to fund more services for more people and indeed different people than the average Tory or Daily Mail reader - because I believe it is right that people have access to education and healthcare regardless of their personal circumstance and I believe it is right that society, through Government, provides support for the worst off, preferably support that enables people to improve their lives. Tax is the lever by which politicians and communities achieve these and all other social goals.
Branding tax as a theft is a very poor message to send at any time. Branding this execellent idea for a new tax, that in the current climate should be able to achieve very broad-based popular support (even from Daily Mail readers) as theft is little short of a tragedy.
The campaign shot themslves in the foot before they even started.
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Standing for Cynical Attempt to Take More Money From the Taxpayer
Thats the nicest complement I have had in a long time.
Thank you!
Diana
Just posting your list into a presentation for this weekend!
Thank You,
"You're definitely A fighter never looking for a fight"
That's why we all respect your good work on LL.
cheers
"Robin Hood tax" Tremendous,title suits what it's meant to achieve. Take tax from bankers to give to the less well off.
It's the "Luvvies" that have instigated this idea and they have every right to naming it with artistic licence, & every Country throughout the World can relate to the story.
Remember, it was the nasty Sheriff of Nottingham & his rich followers that were stealing from the poor.
Robin Hood, Robin Hood, riding through the glen
Robin Hood, Robin Hood, with his band of men
Feared by the bad, loved by the good
Robin Hood, Robin Hood, Robin Hood
He called the greatest archers to a tavern on the green
They vowed to help the people of the King
They handled all the trouble on the English country scene
And still found plenty of time to sing
He came to Sherwood Forest with a feather in his cap
A fighter never looking for a fight
His bow was always ready and he kept his arrows sharp
He used them to fight for what was right
If Governments can't make the bankers afraid, I am happy for a band of "luvvies"(good men) that have gathered together to fire A sharp arrow into the bulls-eye, and will get this "Robin Hood Tax" up & running & justice will be done.
cheers
If people are going about their lawful business why should the government seek to make them fear the state?
Blameing the bankers instead of the regulatory framework, legislation and government policies and backing that allowed the bankers to act as they did does not address the root.
We have compulsory liability insurance for vehicles on public roads because nothing can ever be completely risk-free. This is the same principle applied to people who drive large economic vehicles.
A really, really stupid name, and one almost designed to backfire.
For some strange reason, despite having known Nottingham since I was a child, 'Robin Hood' always reminds me of the Momus song of the same name.
As for: "but I do know damn well I would chose to fund more services for more people and indeed different people than the average Tory or Daily Mail reader - because I believe it is right that people have access to education and healthcare regardless of their personal circumstance and I believe it is right that society, through Government, provides support for the worst off, preferably support that enables people to improve their lives."
This is the problem with this sort of politics - artificial dividing lines. You treat all Tories or 'Daily Mail readers' (wot, no Sun?) as the same. Even the word 'average' does not let you off the hook. In reality you will find a whole range of ideals on the right, just as you will on the left.
For instance, I have met very few people who will say that: "access to healthcare or education regardless of their personal circumstance" is not a good idea. Yet it is so convenient for you to imagine so.
But expanding on your point, as I mentioned yesterday, the campaign website is fairly poor in getting across the substance of the message. Nice Guardianista-friendly cut out masks; yes. Real figures and details of mechanisms - no. Lots of British suport - yes. Internationalism - no.