Green MP for Brighton Pavilion Sian Berry said:
“At next week’s budget, the Chancellor must deliver justice for hard-pressed families by fully scrapping the cruel two-child benefit cap and fairly taxing wealth.
“In Brighton Pavilion, more than one child in five grows up in poverty, while billionaire and millionaire wealth continues to soar. We must turn the tide on this awful inequality.
“This Government promised change and has failed to deliver. The Chancellor could raise a truly significant £30 billion a year to invest back into public services, just by asking the very wealthiest to pay a properly fair share.
“No one should be trapped in a mouldy, damp home, or forced to choose between heating and eating to make ends meet. The Green Party’s message to the Chancellor is simple: cut bills, tax billionaires.”
The Green Party leadership team, together with Green MPs, Peers, and 20 Green Council Leaders and Deputy Leaders – have joined forces to urge the Chancellor to tax wealth fairly, end the cost-of-living crisis and deliver real change.
In a letter sent to the Chancellor today [Wednesday 19th November] the Green Party is calling on the government to commit to immediate and long term measures to address the cost-of-living crisis and bring children out of poverty.
Senior Green figures are urging Reeves to tax wealth by:
- Implementing a 1% tax on wealth over £10 million and 2% over £1 billion, raising £14.8 billion per year.
- Aligning rates of Capital Gains Tax – currently the lowest in the G7 – with income tax so income from work is not taxed more than income from wealth, raising an additional at least £12 billion per year.
- Introducing National Insurance on investment income, in line with employment income, to raise at least £6.1 billion per year.
Senior Green figures are urging Reeves to tackle the cost-of-living by:
- Moving policy costs off bills, cutting typical household energy bills by £156 per year.
- Stopping gas prices inflating the price of electricity, cutting bills by at least £65 per year.
- Scaling up nationwide retrofit.
- Ending profiteering off essentials: bringing energy retail companies and water into public ownership.
- Giving Local Authorities the power to control rents, similar to Scotland.
- Scrapping the two child benefit cap in full.
- Extending free school meals to all primary and secondary school children.
Greens say the package of measures would raise over £30 billion a year to spend on tackling the cost-of-living crisis and bringing down household energy bills, which have risen by 42% since 2021.
Last year, billionaires saw their collective wealth increase by £35 million a day and Britain’s 50 richest families now hold more wealth than half the population combined.
The Greens argue that taxes on the super-rich should be used to move policy costs away from electricity bills, saving a typical household around £156 a year from their electricity bill. The government should pay for these policy measures through wealth taxation instead. In addition to this, they call for decoupling the price of electricity from expensive gas, which they say could cut bills by at least £65 per year for the average household.
In light of rumoured cuts to the government’s flagship Warm Homes Plan, they are also calling on the government to ‘scale up’ investment in home insulation, to reduce bills in the long-term.
As well as scrapping the two-child benefit cap in full, the Greens are also pushing the Chancellor to extend free school meals to every child to help families with soaring food prices, which have risen by over a third since 2020.
ENDS
