Secretary of the Treasury in the Government of British shadow does not know the tax rate of National Insurance

official acknowledged in the British Labour Party opposition that he does not know the tax rate of National Insurance in the United Kingdom, although he served as Chancellor of the Exchequer (finance) in the shadow cabinet.

The newspaper (the Independent), published on Monday that Alan Johnson initially tried to avoid responding to a question during a television interview, but responded after the pressure that the rate of National Insurance is 20 'in the United Kingdom, although it does not exceed 12.8'.

The newspaper added that Johnson, the interior minister in the previous government, has no economic background and surprise choice as Treasury secretary in the shadow government a lot of Labour MPs because of the apparent lack of the concept of good performance.

She pointed out that Johnson had trouble in another interview to explain how it will take a long time to eliminate the budget deficit in Britain as part of the policy of the Labour Party, and first suggested the possibility that this is done by the year 2015, before it was announced later that it means in the year 2016 and a conversation that 'may read information on the budget rather than'.

The Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer announced in a radio interview that a separate value-added tax imposed on food, although they were not imposed at all on these materials.

The newspaper added that the Labour Party officials now fear that Johnson will be the wrong choice for the post of Minister of Treasury at a time when the economy occupies a central position in the political debate, because it has so far failed to provide a credible economic program of the Labour Party as an alternative to the program of the coalition government.

The newspaper quoted a source in the opposition Labor Party said 'The problem is that no one is expected to be Johnson and Secretary of the Treasury next'.

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