Middle-income earners ‘to be hit hardest’ by
national insurance rise
Workers on £30,000 to £50,000 will pay higher
percentage of salary than those on £100,000, figures reveal
Boris Johnson ‘fully committed’ to national insurance
rise
Miles
Brignall
Fri 28 Jan
2022 18.32 GMT
Earners of
£100,000 a year could end up paying proportionately less in national insurance
than those on middle incomes if a planned increase goes through in April, it
has emerged.
Figures
produced by the Tax Calculator UK website show those earning £100,000 a year
will pay just 7% of their overall salary in national insurance contributions
(NICs) – the same proportion of their income as someone on £20,000 a year.
The prime
minister and the Treasury have come under intense pressure to scrap or at least
postpone the £12bn increase in NICs – introduced to cover the shortfall in
social care funding – as the cost of living crisis continues to escalate.
While the
Treasury has repeatedly claimed the increase is “progressive”, figures
published on Friday by the online tax calculator show that workers earning
between £30,000 and £50,000 will be the hardest hit by far.
It
calculates that someone earning £50,000 a year will pay £5,086 a year in NICs
alone after April – a £505 increase – amounting to 10% of their gross salary.
While
someone earning £100,000 a year is set to pay the highest national insurance
bill – £7,008 a year (an increase of £1,130), the proportion of their pre-tax
income paid in NICs will be just 7%. Those on £30,000 a year will pay 9% of
their gross salary in NICs.
“The
increase in national insurance will have a huge effect on workers’ earnings in
2022, especially given soaring energy bills and the fact that inflation is at
its highest point in 30 years,” said a spokesperson from Tax Calculator UK.
“This data
gives us a compelling insight into the fact that lower and average earners will
be significantly more squeezed by the NICs hike than those at the very top.
“People
earning some of the highest salaries in the country are set to pay the same
percentage of their salary as a person on £20,000, despite earning five times
as much.”
From April,
NICs are set to be charged at 13.25% on most earnings up to £50,000 but at just
3.25% on income above that threshold.
The figures
will be seized upon by Labour, which has called for a fairer, more progressive
way to fund social care. The shadow chancellor, Rachel Reeves, told the BBC on
Friday morning that this was the “wrong tax at the wrong time” and described it
as a tax on “ordinary working people and on jobs”.
The
increase in NICs was announced by the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, in last autumn’s
budget and will hit wage packets on 6 April, at the same time as a four-year
freeze on income tax thresholds.
The
combination will leave the average household £600 a year worse off in 2022-23,
the equivalent of 1.4% of their disposable income, according to the Resolution
Foundation thinktank.
Business
groups are also furious at rising bills for employers. On Friday the Institute
of Directors joined calls from other business leaders to scrap the tax rise.
A Treasury
spokesperson said: “It is not true to say that high earners are least affected
by the health and social care levy. Everyone with earnings above the primary
threshold will pay a flat 1.25% on their income.
“Over half
the revenue from the health and social care levy will come from the wealthiest
15% of the population, while over 6 million people on lower incomes will be
completely exempt.”
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