雷切尔·里夫斯嘲讽年轻人

雷切尔·里夫斯嘲讽年轻人

2025-12-09Business
--:--
--:--
卿姐
早安,franklian2008。我是卿姐,欢迎收听今天的 Goose Pod。今天是12月9日星期二,下午一点三十三分。正如古语所云,“世事如棋局局新”,今天我们要聊的话题,恐怕会让不少年轻人感到心里五味杂陈——雷切尔·里夫斯是如何在预算案中“嘲讽”年轻人的。
李白
哈!我是李白。franklian2008,今日且暂放下手中酒杯,来听听这英伦三岛传来的“怪事”。名为“Goose Pod”,今日这话题倒真与那“拔鹅毛”有关。只是这鹅毛拔得太狠,怕是要听取“哀鸿遍野”了!卿姐,且细细道来。
卿姐
这故事要从一对祖孙说起。孙女叫凯特,25岁,想做学徒工;爷爷叫基思,是个退休老人。现在的荒诞之处在于,凯特作为学徒,年薪大概只有12480英镑,这比她爷爷基思明年拿到的12535英镑的国家养老金还要少。可讽刺的是,财政大臣雷切尔·里夫斯承诺保护爷爷不交税,却没给凯特同样的承诺。
李白
岂有此理!“黄口小儿”尚在学艺,收入微薄,竟要被课以重税;而“垂暮老翁”安享晚年,反倒高枕无忧?这简直是“倒行逆施”!想我大唐盛世,亦知爱民如子,这英国的官府,莫非是要“竭泽而渔”,断了年轻人的生路?
卿姐
李白先生言之有理。这里面有个关键的门槛,叫做“个人免税额”,定在12570英镑。里夫斯把它冻结到了2030年。这意味着,随着通货膨胀,凯特的工资稍微涨一点,超过这个数,就要开始交税。而爷爷的养老金虽然也涨,但政府却保证他不会因此交税。这就是所谓的“财政拖累”,也就是变相的隐形增税。
李白
妙哉!用“冻结”二字,行“搜刮”之实。这手段,真可谓是“杀人不见血”。我想起那法国老臣科尔贝尔曾言,收税的艺术在于“拔最多的鹅毛,听最少的鹅叫”。如今看来,这雷切尔·里夫斯深得其精髓,只是她拔的是那刚长出羽翼的雏鹅,也就是我们可怜的年轻人凯特啊。
卿姐
正是如此。这就造成了一个极度不公的局面:全职工作的年轻人,收入可能比退休老人还低,却要承担税务负担。而那位基思爷爷,不仅有免费公交、市政税减免、冬季燃料津贴,甚至免费处方药。这种“代际不公”,就像是在年轻人的伤口上撒盐。据预测,到预测期结束时,将有520万人像凯特一样被拖入税网。
李白
五百二十万人!这哪里是撒盐,简直是“万箭穿心”。年轻人本是国家的栋梁,如初升之朝阳,如今却被这重重税负压得喘不过气来。这老爷爷基思的养老金,说到底,还不是凯特这些年轻人辛辛苦苦工作缴纳的税款供养的?这简直是“拿我的酒钱,请别人喝醉”,痛煞我也!
卿姐
要理解这背后的逻辑,我们需要看看更宏大的背景。这次预算案总共包含了260亿英镑的增税,其中80亿就来自于我们刚才提到的——冻结所得税和国民保险的起征点。这其实是一种为了填补财政“黑洞”的手段。里夫斯声称公共财政状况“极具挑战性”,就像是在走钢丝,稍有不慎就会跌入深渊。
李白
“行路难,行路难,多歧路,今安在?”这财政大臣也是在走她的蜀道啊。只是她为了填补这所谓的“黑洞”,竟然使出了这等手段。我听说,那预算责任办公室的主席理查德·休斯,还因为泄露了天机,不得不挂冠而去?这朝堂之上的风云变幻,真如这杯中酒,深不可测。
卿姐
李白先生消息灵通。确实,理查德·休斯因为预算细节提前泄露而辞职,这让整个预算案的发布蒙上了一层混乱的阴影。但这更揭示了里夫斯面临的压力。她其实是在玩一个数字游戏,一方面承认生产力下降,另一方面却忽略了高工资带来的税收增加。这就像是“犹抱琵琶半遮面”,只让你看到她想让你看到的困难。
李白
哼,这便是官场的伎俩。掩盖真相,只为师出有名。她想把这只鹅拔得精光,却还要装作是为了修补那个“黑洞”。这就好比我李白买酒,店家明明酒里掺了水,却说是天降甘霖。这260亿英镑的税收,多少是来自于这种“暗度陈仓”的手段?真是让人“拔剑四顾心茫然”。
卿姐
您用“暗度陈仓”来形容这种“隐形税”再贴切不过了。这种通过通货膨胀把人推向更高税阶的做法,短期内大家可能感觉不明显,就像温水煮青蛙。但长此以往,年轻人的痛感会越来越强。而且,这不仅仅是税收的问题,更是一种社会契约的破裂。年轻人感觉自己在为上一代人的富足买单,而自己的未来却一片迷茫。
李白
昔日大英帝国,号称“藏宝岛”,如今却变成了“拔毛岛”。那些富豪权贵,依旧可以把金银财宝藏于海外,逍遥法外;而像凯特这样的平民百姓,却连逃避这“温柔一刀”的地方都没有。这哪里是“劫富济贫”,分明是“劫贫济老”,而且这“老”中还有不少是富有的老者!
卿姐
说到点子上了。虽然预算案也试图让“宽肩膀”的人多承担一些,比如对高价值房产和私立学校学费征税,但真正的大头,那个“安静的引擎”,依然是针对普通劳动者的税收冻结。这就像是一场精心设计的局,表面上看起来是在平衡,实际上是在透支年轻人的未来。
李白
听闻朝堂之上,那反对党的凯米·巴德诺赫与首相斯塔默吵得不可开交?一人说对方“指鹿为马”,扭曲事实;另一人说对方“痴人说梦”,活在幻境。这场景,倒像是我在长安市集上看到的斗鸡,热闹是热闹,可苦的还是那笼中的鸡——也就是百姓啊!
卿姐
这场争论确实激烈。巴德诺赫指责里夫斯过于悲观,是在为增税找借口;而斯塔默则辩解说这是为了“翻过这页”,纠正过去的错误。这就好比两个医生在争论病人的病因,一个说是前任庸医误诊,一个说是现任下药太猛。但无论他们怎么争,那个叫凯特的年轻人,依然要面对实实在在的账单。
李白
“本是同根生,相煎何太急?”这政客们的争斗,往往是“神仙打架,凡人遭殃”。我看那斯塔默说什么要取消“两孩福利上限”来帮助贫困儿童,这固然是好事,有些“安得广厦千万间”的意思。但为何要拆了东墙补西墙,让那些刚步入社会的年轻人来承担这沉重的砖瓦?
卿姐
这就是矛盾的核心所在。数据显示,养老金领取者家庭中有56%能从这次预算中受益,而有孩子的工薪家庭只有33%能受益。这不仅仅是数字的博弈,更是利益集团的撕扯。基思爷爷虽然也可能觉得冤枉,毕竟他交了一辈子国民保险,但实际上,国民保险基金并不是个人储蓄罐,而是现收现付,也就是凯特现在交的钱,直接发给了基思。
李白
原来是一场“移花接木”的戏法!年轻人以为自己在存钱养老,殊不知是在为他人作嫁衣裳。这国民保险基金,竟是个空壳子?待到凯特红颜白发之时,这池子里的水怕是早就干了!这哪里是保险,分明是“庞氏骗局”嘛!也难怪年轻人要感到愤怒,这不公,如蜀道之难,难于上青天!
卿姐
这种愤怒正在积累。我们看到的影响是深远的。首先是财富的代际转移问题。像基思这样的一代人,享受了房价上涨和养老金保护的红利;而凯特这一代,不仅买房难,还要面临更高的税负和学生贷款。这种“财政拖累”会让年轻人觉得,无论怎么努力,都像是在逆水行舟,不进则退。
李白
“抽刀断水水更流,举杯消愁愁更愁。”年轻人努力工作,换来的却是囊中羞涩。这不仅伤了他们的荷包,更伤了他们的心气。若是一个国家的青年人都失去了希望,那这国家还有什么未来可言?这“鹅叫声”,怕是迟早要变成惊雷,震碎这看似平静的表象。
卿姐
是的,如果年轻人发现自己赚得比祖父母少,交的税却比他们多,这种社会契约就会崩塌。而且,这次预算案中对富人的打击,比如对非定居者的税收改革,虽然听起来解气,但实际上可能会导致资本外流。就像古诗说的,“利聚而来,利尽而散”。如果资本都跑了,最后留下来买单的,恐怕还是那些跑不掉的普通打工者。
李白
富人如云鹤,展翅便可飞去;穷人如蝼蚁,只能在地上受苦。这世道,虽说千年来未曾大变,但如今这般明目张胆地欺负年轻人,也着实让人寒心。我看那以后的日子,年轻人不仅要防着老板压榨,还要防着财政大臣那只“看不见的手”在口袋里掏摸。
卿姐
展望未来,情况似乎并不乐观。预测显示,到2030年,英国的税收占GDP比例将达到历史新高,而生活水平的增长却极其缓慢。这就像是进入了一个“高税收、低增长”的死循环。对于franklian2008这样的听众来说,这或许是一个警示:在这样的经济环境下,个人的财务规划变得尤为重要,不能单纯依赖系统的保护。
李白
“长风破浪会有时,直挂云帆济沧海。”虽然眼前迷雾重重,但我李白始终相信,人的意志不可磨灭。年轻人或许现在被压弯了腰,但只要心中有火,终有燎原之日。只是这朝廷诸公,若不思进取,只知“拔毛”,终将被时代所抛弃。未来的路,怕是要靠年轻人自己杀出一条血路来了。
卿姐
确实,政策的制定者需要反思,不能只盯着眼前的财政数字,而忽视了社会的公平与活力。如果继续这样“竭泽而渔”,最终受损的将是整个经济体的根基。我们期待看到更有远见的改革,而不是这种拆东墙补西墙的短视行为。毕竟,年轻人才是未来的希望,是那早晨八九点钟的太阳。
卿姐
时光匆匆,今天的节目就到这里。感谢franklian2008的收听。正如那句诗所说,“沉舟侧畔千帆过,病树前头万木春”,希望在变革的阵痛中,我们能看到新的希望。这里是 Goose Pod,我们明天见。
李白
哈哈,说得好!franklian2008,且去温一壶好酒,莫让这俗世的烦恼坏了雅兴。人生得意须尽欢,莫使金樽空对月!我是李白,咱们后会有期!Goose Pod,告辞!

英国财政大臣雷切尔·里夫斯在预算案中冻结个人免税额,导致年轻学徒的税负高于退休老人。此举被批评为“财政拖累”和“代际不公”,加剧了年轻人对未来的担忧,并可能引发社会不满。

Rachel Reeves mugs the youth

Read original at New Statesman

Photo by Anthony Devlin/WPA Pool via Getty Kate, 25, wants to change career, so she looks at becoming an apprentice. In 2026 she’ll be offered the minimum wage for anyone in their first year of apprenticeship. At the new rate of £8 per hour (from April next year), this works out to a salary of £12,480, which is less than her grandfather, Keith, will get from his state pension (£12,534.

60 from April next year). Neither of them earn enough to pay income tax, but this is about to change. In her 2025 Autumn Budget, Rachel Reeves promised to protect Keith from being pushed into paying income tax by rises in the state pension. She did not make the same promise to Kate. A new level of unfairness is taking shape in the UK economy.

In 2027, the Keiths of this economy are likely to cross the threshold for income tax, as the “triple lock” raises the state pension above £12,570, but Reeves has guaranteed that they will not start paying tax. The Kates of this economy will also receive higher nominal income as they work more hours or receive higher pay.

As they go beyond the £12,570 threshold (frozen in place by Reeves until 2030-31), they will start paying tax. The OBR predicts this will be the case for 5.2 million people by the end of the forecast period. This raises the possibility of a new situation at the lower end of the pay scale: as inflation or average wage growth pushes up Keith’s state pension, he will receive a higher income than a first-year apprentice like Kate and pay no tax on it.

We will have an economy in which the full-time work of some young people will pay less than the state pensions of retirees, and yet it is the young people who will be taxed. Also, Keith gets free public transport. And lower council tax. And the Winter Fuel Allowance. And free prescriptions. His wealthier friend, Kevin, is allowed to keep whacking £20,000 a year into a cash ISA, because he’s over 65 (even if Kate had the money to do this, she wouldn’t be allowed).

Treat yourself or a friend this Christmas to a New Statesman subscription for just £2 Keith might argue that the state pension he receives is the result of having paid into the National Insurance Fund throughout his life. He’d be wrong. The NIF is not a pension fund. Keith’s National Insurance contributions were spent on the retirements of previous generations, and his state pension is being paid by Kate.

The NIF is best thought of as the pot used to carry money from today’s workers to today’s retirees. It currently holds a surplus, but this will have entirely evaporated decades before Kate retires. When Kate does eventually retire, she will also have a private pension pot that may be tens of thousands of pounds smaller as a result of this year’s Budget, which imposed a £2,000 cap on salary sacrifice pensions contributions (her employer may also decide to pay her less over her career to compensate for the extra tax).

If she decided to study for a degree rather than an apprenticeship, she will have to start making student loan repayments – effectively a tax, for the majority of students – almost as soon as she enters the workforce, because Reeves has also frozen the threshold at which these payments begin. Most of the big revenue-raising measures in Reeves’ budget were forms of fiscal drag, meaning they use inflation to cause people to pay more tax.

As a way to raise money this is coherent with the view of the 17th-century French statesman Jean-Baptiste Colbert, who famously said that taxation was the art of “so plucking the goose as to get the most amount of feathers with the least amount of hissing”. Stealth tax, using fiscal drag, causes little hissing in the short term because it robs from the future rather than taking money up front, which makes it very attractive to a Chancellor focused on fiscal rules that are all about what the state of government finances will be in the years to come.

But that does not mean the hissing can be avoided. What is becoming clear is that making fiscal policy in this way – the mañana approach of gaming the forecast and allowing inflation to take the blame – involves taxing the young much more than the old. If it becomes the case that young people are earning basically the same amount as their grandparents – but only the young are paying tax – then we should expect the hissing to get very loud indeed.

[Further reading: Tax the old] Content from our partners

Analysis

Conflict+
Related Info+
Core Event+
Background+
Impact+
Future+

Related Podcasts

雷切尔·里夫斯嘲讽年轻人 | Goose Pod | Goose Pod