Are Britain’s rich packing up? Here’s what’s behind the tax crackdown fears

Are Britain’s rich packing up? Here’s what’s behind the tax crackdown fears


Ellevated view over London’s River Thames and city financial district skyline.

Gary Yeowell | Digitalvision | Getty Images

Stark warnings have surfaced since the U.K.’s tax crackdown on the wealthy that an exodus of the mega-rich is underway. Hard data has yet to back up the trend.

At the heart of the potential flight are changes to the British tax system, from capital gains and inheritance tax to extra stamp duty rates. In particular, the abolition of the so-called non-dom regime, which allowed wealthy foreigners to avoid paying tax on earnings outside the U.K. and to elude inheritance duties on their global assets, courted much controversy.

The fear is that an exodus of wealthy people will translate into lower economic growth and diminish the UK’s attractiveness as a place to live, invest, and do business. 

“We know that the top 1% and the top 0.01% pay a very high proportion of taxes in this country, so the tax base starts to shrink. The second thing is, you lose the benefit of the money that they spend in the economy. That’s not just about people that they employ, but it’s also about things like philanthropy,” said Jenkins, who is now the CEO of 10x Banking. 

“What we really need most of all in this country, is people to start and grow businesses. And that means we have to be an attractive location for capital for starting businesses,” he added.

Are the wealthy leaving London?

There are even warnings that the Labour party risks taking Britain back to the challenges of the 1970s, notably under then Finance Minister Denis Healey. At the time, a high-tax and anti-business environment pushed tens of thousands of people out of the country in the “Brain Drain.”

Adding to the uncertainty is whether the current Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves will introduce further changes to taxes in the upcoming Autumn budget, such as a potential wealth duty.

However, claims of a mass exodus of wealthy non-doms in response to tax rises may be overblown. Initial tax data suggests the number leaving of people the country is in line — or below — official forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility, which forecast that 25% of non-doms with trusts and 12% of those with trusts would flee the U.K. over 2025-26 in response to the abolition of the tax status.

This casts shadow over a widely cited report published in association with Henley & Partners, a British investment migration consultancy, which claimed that 16,500 millionaires would quit the country in 2025. Critics have previously questioned the study for depending heavily on data from LinkedIn, which is not reliable in finding someone’s tax residence.

Britain's rich are fleeing - and here's where they're going

Berenberg Economist Andrew Wishart said the potential outflow of wealthy people will impact some parts of the economy more than others.

“It’s going to affect the top end of London’s property market. So there are going to be pockets that are quite severely affected by this exodus. However, for the U.K. economy as a whole, that’s a very small part of the pie,” he said. 

The U.K. is set to publish an estimate of how many non-doms left the country due to the new rules in 2027.



Source

AI could be causing ‘quiet time’ in labor market, top Trump economic aide Hassett says
World

AI could be causing ‘quiet time’ in labor market, top Trump economic aide Hassett says

Artificial intelligence could be increasing worker productivity so much that companies slow hiring, top Trump administration economic advisor Kevin Hassett said Monday. “I think that there have been mixed signals in the job market,” the National Economic Council director said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” adding that he has seen “really, really positive signals in the […]

Read More
China slow-walks U.S. soybean purchases as stockpiles hit multi-year highs, undermining Trump’s trade deal claims
World

China slow-walks U.S. soybean purchases as stockpiles hit multi-year highs, undermining Trump’s trade deal claims

China’s imports of U.S. soybeans have shown little sign of rebounding as Beijing’s stockpiles swelled to their highest levels in years, undermining U.S. President Donald Trump’s claims that a recent trade truce would spur major new Chinese purchases. China, the world’s largest consumer of soybeans, has built up a glut of supplies after months of […]

Read More
Emirates bets big on Boeing with  billion order at Dubai Airshow
World

Emirates bets big on Boeing with $38 billion order at Dubai Airshow

A Plane Boeing 777X performs during the Dubai Airshow, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, November 14, 2021. Amr Alfiky | Reuters Emirates said Monday it has placed an order for 65 additional Boeing 777-9 aircraft, worth $38 billion at list prices, on the opening day of Dubai Airshow 2025. Emirates is Boeing’s largest customer in […]

Read More