With £196bn on the cards from a proposed billionaire tax, around 1.19 million social houses could be provided, meaning the waiting list for social homes would be reduced to just 94,000 people.
The current waiting list for social housing is so long that some are facing delays of more than half a century; the longest in the country is in London borough Greenwich, where people could face a 55-year wait for social housing.
Fund Keir Starmer’s abandoned climate policy
In a major U-turn in February, ahead of the general election, Labour scrapped its climate policy of spending £28bn every year on its green investment plan.
Announced in 2021, the 28bn per year climate pledge would reportedly have been spent on hydrogen power, offshore wind, tree planting, flood defences and home insulation. Instead Labour has said it will spend £23.7bn across five years on green initiatives.
A £196bn wealth tax would fund Labour’s initial promise on the climate with plenty of room to spare.
In fact, the money raised annually by Brazil’s proposed “billionaire tax” would foot the bill for environmental spending promised by France (€20bn/£17bn), Germany (€57bn/£49bn), the Netherlands (€28bn/£24bn) and Italy (€76bn/£65bn) combined, on top of the UK.
There would even be a £7bn leftover, which is around what Europe spends annually to protect one million hectares of land in the Brazilian Amazon.
Eliminate child poverty in the UK
One of the issues that experts have claimed is fuelling a rise in child poverty in the UK is the two-child benefit limit, which figures state could be scrapped with just a fraction of the proposed “billionaire tax” at £3.4bn a year. Charities estimate that scrapping the two-child benefit cap would lift 300,000 children out of poverty.
And with £186.6bn leftover to spend, the proposed wealth tax could fund:
All of these policies could be funded with tens and tens of billions of pounds to spare.
See universal credit more than triple
The UK is forecast to spend £90bn on universal credit in 2024-25. With an extra £190bn cash injection, this amount would rise to £280bn if all of the money was solely spent on uplifting universal credit.
With a 211% increase in funding to universal credit, then, families across the country could see a few hundred extra pounds in their wallets if the money was directly allocated to recipients.
With those single and under 25 receiving £311.68 per month currently, according to the government’s website, an uplift from the “billionaire tax” would see them receiving £969.32 per month.
For those single and 25 or over, currently receiving £393.45 per month, monthly universal credit would increase to £1,223.63.
The amount a person would receive for a first child born on or after 6 April 2017 would also increase from £287.92 per month to £895.43 per month.
Scrap tuition fees for university students
In its 2024 manifesto, the Green Party promised to scrap tuition fees and bring back maintenance grants for universities, which had a predicted annual cost of £7.8bn.
With the £190bn in proposed “billionaire tax”, not only could university students get their studies paid for, but the estimated 1.7 million undergraduates in the UK could be given £107,176 each as a one-off payment with the money left over.
With the average deposit for a first-time home buyer costing around £53,414 in 2023, the cash injection for young Brits would probably be very welcome.
Pay for thousands of tourist trips to outer space
A billionaire tax also could buy tourist tickets into space for around half a million people (533,707). That’s almost the entire population of Edinburgh.
According to Virgin Galactic, a 90-minute trip into space would set you back $450,000 (£356,000), so around half a million people could go on the trip of a lifetime with the money raised from a billionaire tax.
Buy the entire world’s Disney parks
The 12 global Disney parks, with locations including California, Florida, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Shanghai and Paris, are worth an estimated total of $125bn (£97bn). With the money generated by the “billionaire tax” you could comfortably buy every single one of Disney’s theme parks around the globe.
That’s a lot of roller coasters.
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