A very welcome guest post here from Steve, who’s a lefty with a particular interest in how we tackle poverty in Scotland. You can tweet him at @3pSteve. He occasionally blogs at taxingscotland.wordpress.com.

Imagine you’re a minister working for the Scottish Government, and Alex Salmond says, here’s £700million to dish out to people living in Scotland. You decide how it’ll be done, who gets what, come up with a plan and get back to me.

What would you do? Maybe you’d decide to give every individual the same amount, give all 5 million of us £140 each? Maybe you’d give them a token to spend on food so they couldn’t waste it on booze and cigarettes? Maybe you’d give it all to children, or to disabled people, or to the poorest members of society. It depends on you and your own personal politics of course but let me ask you the following:

Would you start by giving over £100 million of it to the UK Government?
Would you give more to the richest 10% of people in our society than to the poorest 30%?
Would you give almost twice as much to the richest 50% in Scotland as you gave to the poorest 50%?

I ask because that’s exactly what the council tax freeze does.

We’re in year 4 of the freeze, and by the end of this year the freeze will have cost £700 million. The UK Government benefits to the tune of £112 million.

People in Scotland get the remaining £588 million shared out between them, and the rich get a lot more than the poor. To date the Scottish Government has not published an income decile analysis of the impact of the council tax freeze but John Swinney has stated a number of times that relative to income the freeze benefits the poor more than the richest.

I wanted to examine that in more detail, so I asked Margo MacDonald MSP if she could ask the Government for an income decile analysis of the freeze. I’d just like to say thank you to Margo MacDonald, and to Mary who works in her office. The Government obliged and sent the following table (SG info on CT freeze):

Income Decile

Bottom 10%

Decile 2

Decile 3

Decile 4

Decile 5

Decile 6

Decile 7

Decile 8

Decile 9

Top 10%

Saving as % of net household income

0.8%

0.5%

0.5%

0.5%

0.5%

0.5%

0.5%

0.4%

0.4%

0.3%

This shows the council tax freeze to be progressive. On average, as a proportion of household income the poorest get a greater benefit from the freeze than the richest. But in cash terms the story looks a little different. Take a look at the following table, created by combining the data provided to Margo MacDonald with official Government data on income deciles:

Income Decile

Bottom 10%

Decile 2

Decile 3

Decile 4

Decile 5

Decile 6

Decile 7

Decile 8

Decile 9

Top 10%

Av. cash benefit of 4-yr freeze

£141.44

£150.15

£182.00

£214.50

£246.35

£284.70

£330.85

£309.40

£382.72

£507.00

Cost of freeze (£m)

30.3

32.1

38.9

45.9

52.7

60.9

70.8

66.2

81.9

108.4

What this shows you is the average cash benefit of the council tax freeze for households in each income decile, and the amount it has cost to hand out those sums.

For example, households in the bottom 10% get £141.44 on average, while the top 10% get £507 on average, three and a half times as much. The higher the income bracket, the more the council tax freeze costs, targeting resources at the richest in society, at the relative expense of the poorest.

Finally, what about my claim that the freeze benefits the UK Government to the tune of £112 million? Well the freeze works by protecting the council tax payer from potential increases. Scottish Government figures show that the UK Government pays 16% of all the council tax in Scotland through the council tax benefit scheme, and so they benefit from the freeze too. Sixteen percent of the £700 million goes to the UK Government, which is £112 million.

Look again at the table above. The council tax freeze saves the UK Government more than the bottom 30% of households in Scotland combined. That’s the poorest 700,000 households in Scotland receiving less from the freeze than the UK Treasury. Does that make any sense?

The longer the freeze goes on, the more expensive it becomes. I think it’s time to ask if there isn’t a better way to give households in Scotland a financial break.

As I asked at the start, what would you do?