π¬π§ The UK Government will raise National Insurance taxes to its highest level since WWII.
π° PM Boris Johnson said the reforms will help tackle a growing health and social care crisis.
βοΈ But critics say the hike is unfair for Black, Asian and low income workers. Here's why.π§΅
1οΈβ£ Unequal wealth distribution puts ethnic minorities at a disadvantage
βοΈ The @RunnymedeTrust says for every Β£1 of white British wealth:
πΈ Pakistani households have 50p
πΈ Black Caribbean households have 20p
πΈ Black African and Bangladeshi households only have 10p
2οΈβ£ Low earners will be taxed more
π For people earning less than about Β£50,000 per year, employers deduct 12% in National Insurance contributions.
π But for those earning more, contribution drops to 2%.
3οΈβ£ BME women will be disproportionately affected
π They are almost twice as likely to be on zero-hours contracts, according to @raceontheagenda and @The_TUC.
π« People employed on these terms also have no guaranteed working hours - which can mean fluctuating incomes.
4οΈβ£ Young BME people will be hit the hardest
π They are more heavily represented in the workforce - so the tax increase would affect them the most.
π΄ 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.
π° The costs of Britainβs social care system are projected to double as the population ages over the next two decades.
π€ Read why Britain's social care insurance hike is unfair to ethnic minorities and those earning less money π
news.trust.org/item/202109071β¦
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