How Wales can be smarter on its limited tax powers to boost its economy

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Wales continues to face economic challenges. The impact of rapid changes in key industries, such as manufacturing, mining and steel making, can be seen in continuing poor employment, productivity and poverty rates.

The latest official figures (albeit relating to the situation a year ago) show Wales experiencing the sharpest economic contraction of any part of the UK.




There are a number of in-built obstacles to improvement. Productivity and economic growth are driven by capital investment but, whilst government revenue spending per person is higher in Wales than the UK average, that masks far lower than average capital expenditure provided to Wales by Westminster.

So, we could do with generating more economic growth, creating more jobs and increasing average wages as these all boost the tax take, enabling more capital investment as well as supporting education. But what’s in the Welsh Government’s toolbox for achieving this?

Tax possesses a unique power to influence individual and organisational behaviour but there are tight legislative constraints on the Welsh Government’s tax powers. For instance, most business taxes, including corporation tax, remain beyond Welsh jurisdiction and Senedd control. The two nationally collected devolved taxes, Land Transaction Tax and Landfill Disposals Tax, generate only modest revenue.

Income tax is devolved but only in relation to earnings and, even then, the Welsh Government has limited powers. There is no ability to change income thresholds for tax bands or introduce new bands. A reduction in revenue raised through Welsh rates of income tax is matched by a reduction in the block grant. In short, it is a very blunt instrument.

The confines of the devolved tax framework have meant that the Welsh Government has had to think creatively about how it can use the powers it does have. There are some striking examples of thought leadership being driven by the Senedd

. The idea of a social care levy was not taken forward in Wales but was picked up by Westminster and introduced as the NHS and Social Care levy (although its abolition was one of the few measures surviving from Liz Truss’s tax cutting mini-Budget). Other initiatives have also proven to be ahead of their time: plastic bag tax, single use plastic plates and cutlery, a visitor levy, council tax premiums for second homes. Originally dismissed as Welsh anomalies, these have proven to be of wide application and tapped into the public mood elsewhere.

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