Sharing Destiny- campaigning for Tax Justice with Christian Aid

Sharing Destiny?   Tackling Tax Justice

Christian Aid is currently campaigning to raise awareness of the impact tax dodging has on the poor.  This is CA tax campaign logoan example of OWW’s ‘Sharing Destiny’ message, showing how problems are shared all over the world and how we can act on behalf of us all. 

Christian Aid, in partnership with UK campaigners, Church Action on Poverty,Churches Action on Poverty logo are showing how tax dodging deprives the poor in developing countries and in the UK of much needed resources and sending a strong message to our government that it’s time for  them to take action to end it.


The Tax Justice Bus Tour

Red double decker bus with Tax Justice sloganThey are taking a red double-decker bus on the Map showing route of of tax justice bus tourTax Justice Tour all round the UK on, from 24 August to 15 October - coming to a location near you!

Why visit the Tax Bus?

The bus will provide a space to learn more about tax dodging and its impact on those living in poverty.

There will be talks with local and national politicians, as well as church leaders and campaigners.

It will also provide the chance to hear from people who have first-hand experience of the impact tax dodging.

And of course, it will provide the opportunity and tools to help people tackle this gross injustice.

To find out more about the campaign and to download a map and tour schedule visit Christian Aid’s web pages here


Tax dodging is an injustice

CA logosays:  Tax dodging costs poor countries an estimated $160 billion a year.

This is one-and-a-half-times the international aid budget, and deprives poor communities of money that should be funding development – paying for schools, hospitals, infrastructure and other vital services.

Christian Aid 2009 report, False Profits, explains the maths, and the kind of damage this does to development – find it here and download it now (PDF).

 

 says:  Tax dodging damages people living in the UK.

£45-£100 billion is lost each year through tax avoidance and evasion. Every pound avoided in tax is a pound less to spend on childcare, social care, health or education. At a time when spending cuts are having a real and damaging impact on the lives of some of the poorest and most vulnerable people in the country, it is morally indefensible for some of Britain’s richest companies to be avoiding paying their fair share of UK taxes.

 More on Church Action on Poverty's campaign here