Those who promote air travel have to balance two apparently
contradictory ideas: that demand is growing so relentlessly that there have to
be, if not more airports, then
at least more runways, and on the other hand the notion that all those
travellers are not coming to the UK because of our rotten taxes. But this is
not a problem for the so-called Taxpayers’ Alliance (TPA).
More guff from Tufton Street
In fact, it’s something that their ubiquitous non-job holder
Emma Boon (now mildly famous for dishonestly appearing on BBC Question Time and
asserting that she and her colleagues were “sticking
up for taxpayers’ money”) who
has the answer to the presentation problem over Air Passenger Duty (APD),
which is to cry “what about the
holidaymakers”. What indeed.
It would be interesting to find out whether it is business
or leisure travel that contributes the most to APD revenue: my thought is that
the former should still edge it, despite the growth in short, medium and long
haul leisure travel over the past quarter of a century. So it is fascinating to
see the TPA appealing to those who by definition are only occasional payers of
the levy.
This is, it has to be concluded, another manifestation of
TPA populism, their appeal to those “hard
working taxpayers” whom they claim to represent, while in reality not
giving a stuff about them. That appeal may well form the basis of another of
their “grassroots” campaigns, the
blatantly dishonest collecting of signatures to claim legitimacy while not
letting on about their real agenda.
And the headline – “Stop
taxing our holidays” – is also misleading, as not everyone uses air travel
to reach their destination. Although the TPA is in the vanguard of agitating
against high speed rail travel, from the south-east at least numbers using that
mode are set to increase significantly as more market entrants appear. The
Eurostar “ski train” will not be a
one-off forever.
But Ms Boon does her best, deploying everything in the TPA
phrasebook: “negative economic effects
... ordinary families ... regressive tax ... tourism is taking a huge hit too
... we’re losing out ... struggling economy ... damaging effect on the ability
of ordinary families to take a well earned holiday ... damaging impact on our
economy ... at the worst possible time”.
And, the usual TPA clincher, it’s not “fair”. What, then, is “fair”?
Er, what an airline industry lobby group says is fair. Personally I think the
airline industry manages rather well on its taxes: no fuel duty for starters,
plus competitive landing and handling fees at many airports. And many carriers
get away with paying cabin crew far less in real terms than was the case 25
years ago.
But the TPA has to keep demonising Government, hence the pointless campaign.
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