A DEBT-CHARGE SUPERTAX 225 is, that it should be imposed on the individual tax- payer direct. So that what we want is an extended, reformed and better graduated form of the super-tax brought down so low that every one who is not merely rich but comfortable should pay his share, For example, any single man or woman with any excess over ^500 a year of unearned income, or over £800 a year of earned income might well pay super- tax on that excess. The exemption limit might well be raised by 50 per cent, for married couples (if their joint incomes are still to be counted as one), and by ^100 a year for each child between the age of five and twenty-five. But all these figures are mere suggestions, and the details of the scheme would have to be worked out by Inland Revenue officials, whose experience and knowledge of the practical working of such matters qualifies them for the task. The broad principle is a special tax for the debt charge to be raised direct from individual incomes with skilful differentiation, according to the circumstances of the taxpayer, in the matter of the number of his dependants, and also according to the source of the income, whether it is being earned by exertions which illness might terminate or received from invested funds, and therefore beyond the reach of the " slings and arrows of outrageous fortune/' That portion of the tax that is required for Sinking Fund might be made payable, at the option of the taxpayer, in Government securities at prices giving some advan- tage to the holder. This form of special debt-charge supertax would enable the ordinary income tax to be reduced considerably at once. Mr Edward Lees,