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Nigel Farage's Robin Hood tax is nothing more than a gimmick
Nigel Farage's Robin Hood tax is nothing more than a gimmick

Telegraph

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

Nigel Farage's Robin Hood tax is nothing more than a gimmick

It will empty out the smarter restaurants of Milan. It will leave the towering apartment blocks of Dubai searching for tenants. And the glistening beaches of the Caribbean will suddenly be a lot emptier. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage has set out an ambitious plan to turn Britain back into a global hub for the mega-rich and bring back all the entrepreneurs who have fled. Even better, he claims his proposals will raise money to help the low-paid. But what looks too good to be true often is. As ever, there's a catch: the scheme will create as many problems as it will fix – and it looks like another example of fantasy economics from Reform. As it prepares for a potential Farage-run government, Reform is finally starting to set out some genuine policies. This week it will unveil a bold plan for bringing back the non-doms. Its 'Britannia card' will offer the world's wealthy, as well as returning tax exiles, a very attractive deal. In return for a £250,000 payment they will be exempt their offshore income from UK taxes for 10 years and to shield them from inheritance taxes for two decades. The money raised will be used to fund a dividend paid to the lowest earning 10pc of workers, estimated at £600 to £1,000 a year paid directly into their bank accounts. The 'Robin Hood' tax will raise lots of money from the rich and transfer it to the poor. It is, at least according to the always-upbeat Farage, a win-win for everyone. Of course, there are lots of good points to be made about the Reform plan. The seeming Tory-Labour consensus that the non-doms were a problem has finally been shattered. Farage quite rightly recognises that the exodus of non-doms has drained money, wealth and jobs out of London and elsewhere, and that has turned into a real problem. Likewise, the UK will need to find a way of tempting back all the entrepreneurs who have flooded out of the UK since the catastrophic Labour Budget last October.

The catastrophic truth about London's decline
The catastrophic truth about London's decline

Telegraph

time21-06-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

The catastrophic truth about London's decline

It may well be a few years behind schedule, but it is finally happening. The UK is levelling up between London and the rest of the country. House prices are falling in the capital, the mega-rich are all leaving for Italy and Dubai, the City is not minting new hedge fund millionaires any more, and this week we learnt that it is now the only region of the country where productivity has not managed to claw its way back to its pre-pandemic levels. There is just one catch. A failing London will be a catastrophe for the British economy – and if we can't find a way to turn that around, it will be impossible to escape from permanent stagnation. We may think of London as the beating heart of the British economy. But increasingly that is no longer true. According to the latest data from the Office for National Statistics, output per hour worked in London fell at an average annual rate of 0.3pc from 2019 to 2023, compared to an average annual gain of 0.7pc a year across the rest of the country. Every other region has now clawed back its pandemic losses, and is above the 2019 level for productivity, but London is still behind. Sure, it is still the most productive part of the country, with output per hour still 28pc ahead of the rest of the UK. But its lead is steadily shrinking, falling from a 33pc lead in 2019 and an all-time high of 38pc back in 2007. At this rate, by the middle of the century there won't be much difference in output per person between London and Manchester, Leeds or Bristol. We can all speculate about the reasons for that. London has a lot of civil servants, and we know that productivity levels in the public sector are dire. It has always been a slog to get into the office, so working from home has stuck for longer in the capital than elsewhere, and that also typically means less output.

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