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Salmond wants tax powers to promote business

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Published Date: 16 June 2009
ALEX Salmond yesterday called for an "equitable" tax system which encourages business activity in Scotland.
In a speech to the Forbes conference, the First Minister said other smaller European countries had used such a system to their advantage.

And he told delegates that there is a difference between transferring "variability" of tax-raising powers – a
s proposed by the Calman Commission on devolution yesterday – and having control of taxation.

Salmond said: "I can see experience of a number of European countries who have used corporate tax in a very judicious way in order to attract business."

Ireland, Austria, Finland and the Baltic states were examples of this, Salmond argued.

The First Minister added: "The placement of corporate tax below your major larger competitor can yield very substantial dividends in not just attracting investment but also generating taxation revenues.

"You need a balance between an equitable personal tax and a competitive corporate tax."

Salmond also criticised the UK Treasury, saying he had never seen an organisation which "misplaced" its forecasts so many times.

He told delegates there are three great lies in life.

"One is 'darling I'll respect you in the morning', two is 'the cheque is in the post' and the third is 'I'm from the United Kingdom Treasury and I desperately want to help Scotland', he said to laughter from delegates.

He added: "I think you're probably better running your own affairs than letting somebody else do it for you."





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  • Last Updated: 15 June 2009 8:50 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Scottish National Party
 
1

cabrach loon,

inverness 16/06/2009 06:50:22
Alex should also have mentioned switzerland, isle of man, channel islands and the many other small viable nations who survive capably without big brother being a nanny to them and restricting their actions as well as dragging them into egotistical headline grabbing acts such as the iraq, afghan and other wars that have little to do with defending their land or peoples!
2

Dissector,

Stirling 16/06/2009 08:51:52
Any politician who talks about "equitable" personal and "competitive" corporate tax regimes demonstrates a 100% lack of understanding about the major influences on business decisions and personal planning. The "equitable" factor is always decided by politics not realities and would, with Mr Cod & Ms Flounder, mean higher personal tax rates given their left-leaning inclinations. In terms of business, this would translate into meaningless reductions in local authority rates for small companies balanced by higher charges on larger companies or, alternatively, high council tax bills or else services (sic) would deteriorate even further and / or there would be job losses.
In matters of tax, grandstanding is always very easy, practicalities are totally different.
3

The Tin Man,

18/06/2009 08:59:49
"Equitable personal tax"? So, he wants to scrap income tax bands and give us an equitable flat-rate of, say, 35% for all? You either have socially-engineered redistributive income tax, or you have equitable income tax. The speech is guff, or he is so far to the right of the Conservatives, that they would need a telescope to spot him.

 

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