- Rates Act 1984
The Rates Act 1984 is an
Act of Parliament in theUnited Kingdom , which controls the tax-raising powers of local authorities.Background
The Thatcher government had been at odds with several high spending Labour controlled councils. The
Local Government Finance and Planning Act 1980 and theLocal Government Finance Act 1982 allowed central government to decide spending limits for individual authorities and could remove general grants, which accounted for approximately 60% of the councils’ income, if they continued to overspend. Several councils continued with their programmes of services and had their general grant cut under the earlier legislation. For example, by 1983, theGreater London Council (GLC) had lost all its central funding.However, the GLC and other councils sought to recoup the loss by increasing the amount they levied in domestic and business rates; a tax paid by companies and homeowners. [Elcock, H., "Local Government: Policy and Management in Local Authorities", (1994)]
Provisions
The Rates Act 1984 allowed the government to individually set caps for the increases to rates that each authority could levy. [Loughlin, M., "Legality and Locality: The Role of Law in Central-Local Government Relations", (1996)] Those who acted "
ultra vires " (or "beyond the powers") set out in the Act could be prosecuted, banned from office for up to ten years and fined. The power to contral rates came into force for the year beginning1 April 1985 . [Rates Act 1984, Ch. 33, s. 18]Use of the Act
The Act was successfully used to force 31 councils (30 were Labour controlled), who had initially resisted, to comply with government taxation and spending limits. Of those, only Lambeth and
Liverpool councillors did not back down and eventually the Act was used to prosecute and fine the leader of Lambeth Council, Ted Knight, and others. He was banned from office for ten years.Legacy
The domestic rates were replaced in 1990 by the Community Charge (dubbed
Poll Tax ), which was paid by more people and intended to reveal inefficient councils, who would be forced to levy a higher charge in order to fund their overspending. Business rates are still levied, but at a level set by central government since 1990. [Atkinson, H. & Wilks-Heeg, S., "Local Government from Thatcher to Blair: The Politics of Creative Autonomy", (2000) ]References
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