20-07-2025
Britain's failed water system won't be fixed by penalising wealthier users
SIR – You report (July 20) that the Government could consider charging the middle classes more for their water in order to subsidise poorer households.
It set me wondering where such manipulation of commodity prices – an indirect form of tax – might end. By this warped logic, could the middle class also be lumbered with higher gas and electricity prices, or more expensive food?
The possibilities are endless. The Government would be able to claim it was sticking to its pre-election pledge not to increase taxes on working people – even working middle-class people. It would just increase costs to the working middle class under a different name.
Terry Lloyd
Darley Abbey, Derbyshire
SIR – Middle-class households are being expected to subsidise others more and more. Paying higher water bills is now being proposed. Surely, however, the time will come when they can't afford to do this.
Indeed, that time may have already arrived.
Laura Madden
Broughton Astley, Leicestershire
SIR – My wife and I are both now retired, but were formerly working-class. We own our property and rely on our pension income, with no additional benefits. We pay our dues.
I worry that, because we have been prudent throughout our 60 years of marriage, we will be categorised as middle-class by this class-obsessed Government.
Why should we be charged more for our water supply in order to subsidise low-income families? They should be responsible for settling their outgoings in the same manner as pensioners and the middle classes.
If our welfare system continues on its current trajectory, the desire to take up employment will become a thing of the past. We are already on the downward slope towards mass unemployment.
John Hinchsliff
Longridge, Lancashire
SIR – I empathise with Robin Willow (Letters, July 20) over his increased Thames Water bills, but would add that the current pricing structure applied by that company penalises low users.
The fixed charges for supply and waste have risen significantly, resulting in massively increased bills for those of us who use the least water. How can this be fair?
Barry Sheldon
Cholsey, Oxfordshire
SIR – It appears that hydrangeas have joined the ranks of middle-class targets in Labour's war on perceived privilege. With peak water rates cunningly aligned with the flowering season, one must ask: where will all this end?
Dermot Shortt
Gerrards Cross, Buckinghamshire