An estimated 41 MPs will benefit from the scrapping of the top rate of income tax – including every cabinet minister.
Owing to MPs’ standard pay increasing to £84,144 from April this year, 2022-23 would have been the first year that senior government ministers would have to pay the 45p rate of tax.
However, the chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, abolished the additional rate of tax as part of a mini-budget of tax cuts unveiled on Friday.
Cabinet ministers claim an additional £67,505 on top of their MPs’ salary, while the prime minister claims an extra £75,440. This would have put them all above the £150,000 threshold for the tax.
A Guardian analysis of the latest register of members’ financial interests found that 16 other MPs had outside earnings or employment in the past 12 months that would have pushed them over the £150,000 threshold.
Those include the former prime minister Theresa May, who would net an estimated £47,305.70 more if she earns the same in the next year as in the last 12 months.
The former attorney general Sir Geoffrey Cox would save about£53,963 as a result of the tax abolition if his earnings remain the same as last year – an amount larger than the average nurse or teacher earns before tax.
Much of Cox’s earnings came from work on an inquiry in the British Virgin Islands, a tax haven, although his earnings came through Withers LLP in London and were subject to HMRC.
The current attorney general, Michael Ellis, will benefit the most of all cabinet ministers from the tax cut, saving an estimated£1,429.70 from the removal of the 45p tax rate.
The Labour leader, Keir Starmer, could also benefit. The leader of the opposition is paid £63,098 by law, on top of the MP base salary. Starmer also made £18,902 in outside
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