The Great Tax Clawback Scam: How the Rich Get Their Money Back (And Then Some)
A conversation with economic author Fred Harrison reveals the hidden machinery that keeps the working class paying for public services the wealthy enjoy — and why no mainstream political party will ever solve this. There is a question that ought to be asked at every party conference, every Budget statement, every hustings and every kitchen table debate in Britain: why, in a society that calls itself a liberal democracy, do the people who work the hardest end up with the least? The standard answers, immigration, automation, globalisation, and austerity, are well-worn and largely unsatisfying. But there is another explanation, one that cuts far deeper, that has been hiding in plain sight for centuries, and that almost nobody in a position of power is willing to name. It concerns rent. Not the rent you pay your landlord each month, though that is part of it, but the broader economic rent that flows silently and relentlessly from those who produce wealth to those who simply own things and ...