Skip to main content
25% of women 'don't benefit from tax allowance boost'
Low-paid workers missed out by 'poorly targeted' measure

A quarter of women do not earn enough to benefit from the latest rise in the income tax personal allowance, the TUC said yesterday.

The TUC said the government’s policy of raising the amount someone can earn before they start to pay income tax was “expensive and poorly targeted.”

The allowance goes up from £9,440 to £10,000 this month, but it is not enough to help low-paid workers or parents on low to middle incomes, said a congress report.

It cited recent analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies which revealed that rich families gained the most from the policy, while the poorest gained the least.

The TUC highlighted that raising personal allowances from £6,475 in 2010/11 to £10,000 has cost the Treasury over £10 billion, but it has done nothing to help the four million lowest-paid workers, said.

About one in six British workers do not earn enough to benefit at all from the new rise and a further 333,000, mainly women, employees will only partially benefit, the research found.

TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady said: “It is odd to see politicians fighting to take the credit for a policy that does so little to help hard-working families and one which is also particularly bad at helping women.”

The report also showed that raising the personal allowance is failing to help working families on low to middle incomes in receipt of universal credit.

The TUC is concerned that because working families’ entitlement to universal credit is based on their post-tax income, for many two-thirds of any financial gain from the personal allowance will be taken away through reductions to universal credit.

Ms Grady said: “It is frustrating to see families on low to middle incomes losing out from the personal allowance rise because the policy comes into direct conflict with universal credit.

“If the government really wanted to help hard-working families on low to middle incomes it should abandon further rises in the personal allowance and focus instead on reversing damaging cuts to tax credits and universal credit that will leave millions of families worse off.”

Congress is urging the government to stop penalising families receiving universal credit by increasing the “work allowance” — the point at which families’ entitlement to universal credit starts to fall — in line with any further rises in the personal allowance.

Morning Star Conference - Race, Sex & Class
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Britain / 23 July 2014
23 July 2014
Colombian national Isabella Acevedo asks to be treated with same leniency as Harper following reshuffle promotion as Disabled People's Minister
Britain / 23 July 2014
23 July 2014
Watchdog investigation closes down 13 unsafe building sites, hands 85 enforcement notices and warns 201 others
Britain / 11 July 2014
11 July 2014
Britain / 9 July 2014
9 July 2014
Similar stories
Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall leaves Downing Stree
Features / 24 March 2025
24 March 2025
Any positives from the government’s green paper proposals are vastly overshadowed by the scale of the cuts to vulnerable low-income households, argues JENNY RATHBONE MS
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves makes her keynote
Features / 22 October 2024
22 October 2024
Raising capital gains tax to match income tax is not only economically sound but morally just, potentially raising billions for public services — it’s an absolute no-brainer for any Labour government, argues BERNIE EVANS
A Universal Credit sign on a door of a job centre plus in ea
TUC Congress 2024 / 10 September 2024
10 September 2024
We need a proper social security system that supports families and provides a proper safety net, writes PADDY LILLIS, calling for the Labour government to lift the cruel two-child benefit cap