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Sep 8, 2021, 6 tweets

πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§ The UK Government will raise National Insurance taxes to its highest level since WWII.

πŸ’° PM Boris Johnson said the reforms will help tackle a growing health and social care crisis.

⭕️ But critics say the hike is unfair for Black, Asian and low income workers. Here's why.🧡

1️⃣ Unequal wealth distribution puts ethnic minorities at a disadvantage

⭕️ The @RunnymedeTrust says for every Β£1 of white British wealth:

πŸ’Έ Pakistani households have 50p
πŸ’Έ Black Caribbean households have 20p
πŸ’Έ Black African and Bangladeshi households only have 10p

2️⃣ Low earners will be taxed more

πŸ“ˆ For people earning less than about Β£50,000 per year, employers deduct 12% in National Insurance contributions.

πŸ“‰ But for those earning more, contribution drops to 2%.

3️⃣ BME women will be disproportionately affected

πŸ“œ They are almost twice as likely to be on zero-hours contracts, according to @raceontheagenda and @The_TUC.

🚫 People employed on these terms also have no guaranteed working hours - which can mean fluctuating incomes.

4️⃣ Young BME people will be hit the hardest

πŸ“ˆ They are more heavily represented in the workforce - so the tax increase would affect them the most.

πŸ”΄ 13% of white people in Britain were aged over 70 in 2011. This falls to just 3.9% of Asian and 4.5% of Black people.

πŸ’° The costs of Britain’s social care system are projected to double as the population ages over the next two decades.

πŸ€” Read why Britain's social care insurance hike is unfair to ethnic minorities and those earning less money πŸ‘‡
news.trust.org/item/202109071…

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