Clearly the answer to this dilemma is to tax heavily the people who couldn't make a living anywhere else doing that job. So my proposal is that we should levy super-taxes on the following:
- Radio 1 DJs
- People who sell "Oxford University" shirts in London
- Jonathan Ross
- Lollipop Men and Women
- Pearly Kings & Queens (bit borderline, this - they could probably get jobs in Japan)
- English Football Managers
- Clowns
- John Bercow
- People handing out leaflets for English language schools
- Evangelists who shout at you on street corners
- Celebrity gardeners
- Anyone in a managerial capacity in a council. Especially the people who designed the Wellingborough town centre "improvements".
- Media Studies Lecturers at ex-Polytechnics
People may say that this approach to taxation is unfair. And I would have to say, yes it is. But I'd like to argue that it's efficient. And of the two, efficient probably wins at the moment. However, when we've soaked every pony, guinea, arfer dollar and tanna out of the Pearly Kings, we won't be wanting the shirts off their backs. After all, what would we wear them with?
Evangelists who shout at you on street corners could probably earn far more in the States shouting at people over the radio :(
ReplyDeleteYou missed Celebrity Chefs, judging by the number of food programs on TV, they are the most upwardly mobile of any group in the country.
ReplyDeleteEileen for Chancellor!!!
ReplyDeleteIt'll never work; they'll all just move to Australia.
ReplyDelete