
Let non-doms pay £250,000 and avoid UK tax, says Nigel Farage
Speaking in central London, Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said "tens of thousands" of people would be tempted to the UK by the offer of the card, which would be renewable every 10 years. "Many talented people are leaving and we want as many entrepreneurs, as many risk-takers, as many job creators, as many people paying lots of tax, as many people investing huge sums of money."Asked if the policy was an example of "fantasy economics", he said the initial £250,000 payment would be "just the tip of the iceberg of what these people will pay if they come back" in stamp duty and VAT in the UK. Questioned on whether an influx of wealthy people would push up property prices in London, he said it was a "good point" but argued there would not be an impact on the cost of affordable housing. Reform says income from the measure would be transferred annually tax-free to the bank accounts of the lowest paid 10% of full-time workers.
Last year, the Labour government announced it would be abolishing the tax status, which allows non-doms to only pay UK tax on money they earn in the country. The so-called loophole meant wealthy individuals were able to legally save money by choosing a lower-tax country as their permanent home.Earlier this year, Chancellor Rachel Reeves said that, having listened to "concerns that have been raised by the non-dom community", she would introduce a more generous transition phase to the policy, There are reports she is considering watering down the policy further after claims it has triggered an exodus of wealthy people from the UK.The government says its package of measures would raise £12.7bn over the next five years.Responding to the Reform UK policy, a Labour spokesperson said: "Nigel Farage can brand this whatever he wants - the reality is his first proper policy is a golden ticket for foreign billionaires to avoid the tax they owe in this country."As ever with Reform, the devil is in the detail. This giveaway would reduce revenues raised from the rich that would have to be made up elsewhere - through tax hikes on working families or through Farage's promise to charge them to use the NHS."Conservative shadow chancellor Mel Stride said: "The British public need a real plan for putting more money in their pockets - but what Reform are peddling is fantasy economics. Their promises are ruinously irresponsible."Only Kemi Badenoch and the Conservatives believe in the fiscal responsibility our country needs."
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