Well, we now have the details on Alistair Darling’s proposal to tax bonuses in the UK, and it looks very good: It’s a 50% tax on all bonuses in the banking industry in excess of £25,000.00 ($40,700).
What is interesting is that this is not a tax on income, but a tax on the bonus reserves themselves, so it avoids the human rights:
Instead of legislating for a levy on individual bankers, the Treasury has focused on the simpler and potentially legally safer route of taxing the bonus pool used by banks for staff compensation.
The recipient of such a bonus would still have to pay personal income tax, so, if he would normally have received a bonus of £100K, he would get a bonus of £50K, and that would be subject to taxation by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs. (see also here)
It disincentivizes the huge bonus awards, and it fills a significant hole in the UK budget, raising £550 million this year, and £3 billion in the future.
In any case, Bloomberg decided to waste a reporter’s day by making him write a story about how it probably won’t happen in the United States.
Well, duh, banks here are largely succeeding in gutting financial reform here.
Make them pay their fair share of taxes? Fuggedaboudit!