Taxing issues

You would expect that a piece by the policy director of an 
organisation calling itself ThinkScotland (Brian Monteith, Perspective, 3 September) would display some evidence of thought. Not a bit of it.

Instead, we get a tabloid-style rant about “the dictatorship of the mob majority”, tittle-tattle about “the talk in Paris” and non-sequiturs: just because “the typical émigré is under 40 and working in a good job”, it does not follow that “the French contribution to [UK] economic growth is therefore considerable”.

However, to be fair, Mr Monteith does offer one interesting fact: only Denmark, the Netherlands and Sweden have higher top rates of income tax than we do.

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Does Mr Monteith not know that all those countries are substantially richer per head than the UK, as well as being less ­unequal?

This country has become a lot more unequal in recent years. Mr Monteith seems to be pleased about this, and indeed his belief that “tax competition is a good thing” suggests he hopes that it becomes more unequal still. While this may be good news for a small minority, it’s hard to see why the rest should welcome it.

Andrew Anderson

Granton Road

Edinburgh