The Budget - Band G Tax £1000!

£90 tax for meeeeeeeee

1.5L Golf from 1983 *** :D

Nice.

Edit: I assume that my tax doesn't change? And 2ndly, if your 3 grams over the limit, get it re-tuned so its a few under? Ok u might loose a hp or two but hey its £130 saved ;)
 
We do sod all in the way of manufacturing these days...

Rubbish.

2006 - Manufacturing in US Dollars

Code:
United States           $1724bn 
China                   $1096bn 
Japan                    $929bn 
Germany                  $620bn 
Italy                    $313bn 
[i][b]United Kingdom           $308bn[/b][/i]
France                   $275bn 
Brazil                   $231bn 
Republic of Korea        $216bn 
Canada                   $213bn 
Spain                    $178bn 
Russian Federation       $163bn 
Mexico                   $136bn 
India                    $130bn 
Indonesia                $103bn 
Netherlands               $85bn 
Australia                 $84bn 
Turkey                    $83bn 
Taiwan Province of China  $76bn 
Thailand                  $62bn
United Nations Statistics Division
 
clv, I'd be interested in your opinion on the decision to abandon the distinction for cars produced before and after 2006 when setting taxation.

What purpose do you feel it is supposed to serve? Are people going to scrap cars now liable for high tax? If not, what is the net result of these changes beyond more money for the treasurey under the guise of 'being environmental'?

FWIW, I support taxation like this for new cars.
 
Rubbish.

2006 - Manufacturing in US Dollars

Code:
United States           $1724bn 
China                   $1096bn 
Japan                    $929bn 
Germany                  $620bn 
Italy                    $313bn 
[i][b]United Kingdom           $308bn[/b][/i]
France                   $275bn 
Brazil                   $231bn 
Republic of Korea        $216bn 
Canada                   $213bn 
Spain                    $178bn 
Russian Federation       $163bn 
Mexico                   $136bn 
India                    $130bn 
Indonesia                $103bn 
Netherlands               $85bn 
Australia                 $84bn 
Turkey                    $83bn 
Taiwan Province of China  $76bn 
Thailand                  $62bn
United Nations Statistics Division

Fair cop, I should have said compared to days gone by. I was referring (subjectively) to the switch away from producing things (mining, steel, cars, etc) and into services.
 
[TW]Fox;11286095 said:
FWIW, I support taxation like this for new cars.

Why?

Clearly it's not really for environmental reasons. Obviously it's a lot fairer than applying the tax to cars that people already own, but that in it's own right surely can't be enough to support it?
 

Becuase it drives change - look at the latest engine range from BMW. Without legislation and taxation pressures a 3 litre 5 Series would do 30mpg, like mine, not 40mpg, like the current models.

It also conditions consumers to think about cost when chosing a brand new car - oil prices are not going to be much lower any time soon.

But all of this becomes irrelevent when considering taxation for existing cars. This is why I dont understand the decision.
 
[TW]Fox;11286095 said:
clv, I'd be interested in your opinion on the decision to abandon the distinction for cars produced before and after 2006 when setting taxation.
No idea, sorry! I would have liked better grandfathering arrangements and focus VED on new cars – with the aim on changed new-buy decision making.
[TW]Fox;11286095 said:
Are people going to scrap cars now liable for high tax? If not, what is the net result of these changes beyond more money for the treasurey under the guise of 'being environmental'?
I don't think VED will cause cars to be scrapped until the cars value is similar to a year or two's difference between the VED on a "better" car and the value of the car itself. So when your old, inefficient Renault gets a VED bill for £400+ quid but the car itself is only worth £300 - at that point it may be scrapped a year sooner than it otherwise would be. No one’s going to crush a £3000 car ‘cos of the VED.

All it means is that cars pretty much at end of life will be scrapped a little bit sooner. Maybe no ideal, but not too serious a problem either.
 
[TW]Fox;11286272 said:
Becuase it drives change - look at the latest engine range from BMW. Without legislation and taxation pressures a 3 litre 5 Series would do 30mpg, like mine, not 40mpg, like the current models.

It also conditions consumers to think about cost when chosing a brand new car - oil prices are not going to be much lower any time soon.

Two points based on fuel efficency, and the high price of oil and increasing levels of fuel duty will both drive consumer demand for more fuel efficient engines?

What does todays legislation bring to mainstream development demand that dosen't already exist?
 
All it means is that cars pretty much at end of life will be scrapped a little bit sooner. Maybe no ideal, but not too serious a problem either.

Not exactly a problem but it hasn't exactly acheived anything.

Now, I wonder how many people are in a similar situation to me - an interesting thought:

To drive my car into town and back costs about £2 in fuel. Some days I'll fancy a walk and I'll the couple of miles and hop a bus into town. The bus return is £2.60 so it costs more than the variable cost of using the car for that journey but hey, it's less hassle than finding a space (I dont pay for parking) and I'm doing my bit and all that.

Now, after I've been forced to cough up £430 for road tax which I must pay irrespective of whether I drive 10 miles or 100,000 miles in that year, I'm going to be a lot more inclined to drive simply to 'get my moneys worth'.

I can't be the only person in that sort of situation, surely?

This sort of taxation NEEDS to be a variable cost. The more you use the car, the more you pay, fixed costs hurt the people who use their car the least! Where is the sense in that?

Look at Jez - 50,000 miles a year in a 4.3 litre car. He will pay less than HALF the road tax I pay despite emitting more than 15 times the C02 and barely returning 25mpg on the Motorway where I'd get 36mpg, whilst listening to Radio 2, preparing a 'fuel economy ***' thread on OcUK.
 
Two points based on fuel efficency, and the high price of oil and increasing levels of fuel duty will both drive consumer demand for more fuel efficient engines?

Not at anywhere near the rate it has currently, though.

In 2000, fuel prices hit 85p a litre.

Now, they are what, 105p a litre around here?

Thats a 20 pence increase in 8 years. Thats not the sort of increase that is large enough to drive the development thats gone on in the last decade.

EfficientDynamics has come about, I reckon, largely as a result of C02 based company car taxation.

What does todays legislation bring to mainstream development demand that dosen't already exist?

See above.
 
[TW]Fox;11286404 said:
This sort of taxation NEEDS to be a variable cost.
Yeah, I agree with you. But how? Very hard to add any more to fuel. Other options are congestion charging and road pricing... As bad as high, fixed taxation is on older cars, low mileage cars - I think the alternatives are less politically acceptable. Blame the electorate.
 
I honestly dont mind road pricing and never have, provided it replaces fuel duty and excise duty and means that for, say, 'average' mileage the cost of driving remains similar, for high mileage it goes right up and for low mileage it goes down.

That way nobody is screwed over, people who think 'I will get a job 100 miles away' have to think long and hard and those who have a car but make an effort to use more sustainable transport or perhaps use a car only for fun pay less than they do now.

But The Sun said 'You will all pay £2 a mile!' so that was the end of that one.

And any oil we save China will simply use up in our place in a matter of days anyway making the whole thing rather futile.
 
[TW]Fox;11286469 said:
And any oil we save China will simply use up in our place in a matter of days anyway making the whole thing rather futile.
But China will have to pay for it. Any oil we save we won't have to pay the Saudi Royals... or the Russians or anyone else for so we can spend it on, well anything we want.
 
Yeah, I agree with you. But how? Very hard to add any more to fuel. Other options are congestion charging and road pricing... As bad as high, fixed taxation is on older cars, low mileage cars - I think the alternatives are less politically acceptable. Blame the electorate.

Not really, I bet most people including me would accept 1-2p per ltr extra on fuel if road tax was abolished. This would make the system fair and easy to police and no one could escape paying it like they can now.

Another benefit would be that there would be minimal admin cost in comparison to the current system this would save millions. Why does everything have to be so difficult and unecessarily complicated.
 
Not really, I bet most people including me would accept 1-2p per ltr extra on fuel if road tax was abolished. This would make the system fair and easy to police and no one could escape paying it like they can now.

See the calculation above - it would be at least 15p per litre extra to abolish road tax. No way would that fly.
 
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