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Why we're paying more

RESEARCH from the Halifax shows that tax revenue raised from stamp duty on residential property and inheritance tax attributable to housing wealth is estimated to have risen almost five-fold from £735 million in 1992/93 to £3,638 million in 2001/02.

This increase has been driven by the failure of successive governments to raise tax thresholds in line with house price inflation.

Halifax also calculates that the stamp duty threshold (currently £60,000) would be raised to £118,500 if it were increased in line with the rise in house prices since March 1993 - the last time that the threshold was increased.

The inheritance tax threshold would be raised to £296,300 - some £46,300 higher than its current level (£250,000).

The main findings of the research are:

Stamp Duty

• Total revenues to the Government from residential stamp duty have increased almost ten-fold since 1992/93, from £280 million to £2,760 million in 2001/02.

• The average UK first-time buyer in 2002 Quarter 3 paid £97,207 to buy their home compared to £45,249 in 1993. Based on the current stamp duty regime, the typical first-time buyer now has to pay £972.

• In 2001, two-thirds (66 per cent) of all buyers were liable for stamp duty compared with just over one-third (36 per cent) in 1993.

• Eight per cent of purchasers were liable for the higher rates of stamp duty applicable on properties bought for over £250,000 in 2001. I

• The average first-time buyer in ten of the 12 UK regions now pays stamp duty.

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