
Rachel Reeves cannot afford to lose any more non-doms
Rachel Reeves is to water down plans scrapping her non-dom tax rules amid concerns about the number of wealthy individuals deserting the UK. It must be true, because it's being repeated everywhere – complete with a bland, non-denial from the Treasury: 'The government will continue to work with stakeholders to ensure the new regime is internationally competitive and continues to focus on attracting the best talent and investment in the UK.'
A key item under discussion is said to be the proposal to make non-doms' worldwide assets liable to inheritance tax, or IHT, including those held in foreign trusts.
There is no doubt many rich people have gone. One analysis by Bloomberg puts the number of company directors who have left at 4,400 in the past year. Examination of Companies House filings shows departures were 75 per cent higher in April than in the same month last year. The worst affected sectors were finance, insurance and property, all of them popular with non-doms.
In the most expensive areas of London, stories abound of shuttered mansions, and a knock-on effect across restaurants, hair and beauty salons, car firms and all the other ancillary services.
The UK, once a favoured magnet for the world's billionaires and multi-millionaires, has fallen off its perch. A recent Oxford Economics survey found that 60 per cent of tax advisers expect more than 40 per cent of their non-dom clients to leave within two years of Reeves ending their beneficial status. With them will go their families, close staff – and their money.
It was the latter that made previous governments, including Labour, seek to attract them in the first place. If they base themselves in Britain, they are more likely to spend and to invest here. That is why other nations are doing their level best to woo them. It's what the Treasury means when it refers to the new regime being 'internationally competitive'.
What is bizarre and shaming is that this administration did not see it coming. Seemingly, ministers did not realise that non-doms would quit. They did not appreciate that, in today's world, rich people can move freely and easily and work from anywhere.
Either they are guilty of extraordinary unworldliness, deluding themselves that wealthy foreigners would carry on living in the UK merely because they like it here – ignoring the effect on their finances; or they simply did not care, and allowed political ideology to prevail.
Whatever the answer, they are now engaged in the sort of reversal and damage limitation exercise which is becoming all too familiar where this government is concerned.
The question now is: will it be enough?
Already, South Africa's richest self-made woman Magda Wierzycka, the billionaire behind UK venture capital fund Braavos, has stated she will shelve plans to leave should the chancellor U-turn on IHT: 'I would absolutely stay and it's not about protecting my money from the tax man. I pay all my taxes, but South Africa has foreign exchange controls and I don't know whether [my estate] would be able to pay the IHT bill under the current rules.'
Whether others are so persuaded, and if Reeves does pull back entirely on IHT, remains to be seen. The problem for her and for Keir Starmer is that the tone has been set.
Even if they do climb down, the feeling persists that this iteration of Labour (as opposed to that of Tony Blair, which famously declared it was 'intensely relaxed about people getting filthy rich') cannot abide well-off people.
The purging of the non-doms followed a pattern. It joined VAT on private schools, the removal of the winter fuel allowance, hitting farmers with their own new IHT bills, and other measures, aimed at the more advantaged end of society.
They can afford it, appeared to be Downing Street 's view. That will be hard to shake-off. The hope must be that the attractions of the UK will weigh heavily and the non-doms will not exit and some, many even, will return. Starmer and Reeves, having set their calamitous course, have much work still to do.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
DAN HODGES: Keir Starmer's time as Prime Minister is over. This is everything I've heard about his U-turns, confusion and lack of leadership behind-the-scenes. Deep down, even he knows he's done
To be fair, Keir Starmer did better than Liz Truss. Her benighted premiership lasted 49 days. His has effectively ended after 11 months, almost six whole terms in Truss Years. But make no mistake, Starmer's premiership is indeed over. Yes, he'll stumble on, 'in office, but not in power' to borrow Norman Lamont's evergreen description of the steady, irreversible erosion of Prime Ministerial authority.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
I've lost four limbs but STILL work three jobs every single day of the week. This is my message to all those languishing on disability benefits: CRAIG MACKINLAY
It's not unusual in politics to become a lightning rod for public disgruntlement, but rarely have I been greeted with such sustained and spittle-flecked abuse as that which turned my mobile red-hot on Friday. My ' crime ', as my abusers saw it, was to suggest in an article in the Daily Mail the self-evident truth that many disability benefit claimants would be better off in work.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
How the future of the Right is being shaped... over exquisite lunches at London's most exclusive clubs
The future of Right-wing politics in Britain is being decided on the cigar terraces of Mayfair. As the opinion poll surge of Nigel Farage 's Reform UK shakes the foundations of the Conservatives, power-brokers from both parties are cutting deals and war-gaming defections on adjoining tables in the capital's most salubrious salons. The Tories have been described as the most successful political party in the world, on the back of 200 years of near-electoral dominance. But if leader Kemi Badenoch is going to maintain that reputation until the next election, it will require a revival of Lazarus-like dimensions. According to a YouGov poll last week, Mr Farage would win 271 seats if an election were held now – well ahead of Labour on 178. The Conservatives would trail the Liberal Democrats on a dismal rump of just 48 seats. It has led to long, dark nights of the soul for Tory grandees and donors: do they stick with the Conservatives, even if they are sleepwalking to electoral doom? Do they try to form a pact with Mr Farage? Or do they just jump ship completely? The result has been a series of lunches and dinners in ultra-exclusive clubs such as 5 Hertford Street and its sister institution Oswald's, both owned by entrepreneur Robin Birley. Oswald's, which is frequented by the likes of the Prince of Wales, Tony Blair, Boris Johnson and the Beckhams, was the venue for a splashy £1 million fundraising event for Reform earlier this year. And on a single day this month, the same lunch service at Oswald's boasted former prime minister David Cameron, his ex-chancellor George Osborne and Tory leadership hopeful Robert Jenrick all dining together, next to Mr Farage and his treasurer Nick Candy in deep conversation on a nearby table – and with former Tory Cabinet minister Jacob Rees-Mogg, who has urged the two parties to form a pact, offering greetings from a third table. In the same week, a short walk across Berkley Square at 5 Hertford Street, popular with Eurocrats and stars such as Hugh Grant, a single lunch sitting offered the spectacle of billionaire Michael Spencer, Lord Cameron's former treasurer, dining with Francis Maude, an ex-Tory chairman, under the watchful eyes of Mr Farage's inner circle, including Arron Banks and Andy Wigmore – the self-styled 'bad boys of Brexit' who helped fund Mr Farage's Brexit campaign in the 2016 referendum – and Mr Farage's mysterious fixer, 'Posh' George Cottrell. As the wine flowed – full-bodied red for the Tories, chablis for the Faragistes – it represented a neat microcosm of the shifting tectonic plates: Lord Maude – tipped to return to the chairman role – is understood to have been lobbying Lord Spencer for funds for the party, while the Faragistes were drawing up a list of Tory donors to target for defection. At the centre of this venn diagram of plotting is Mr Jenrick, who is more open than Mrs Badenoch to cutting a deal with Reform – and is said to have received Lord Cameron's backing to succeed her as leader. Meanwhile, at The In & Out private members' club, a more traditional Armed Forces venue situated at the other end of Piccadilly, allies of Mr Farage and Mr Jenrick have met for informal discussions about 'uniting the Right'. Conspirators have even floated the idea of Mr Jenrick acting as chancellor in a Farage administration, although both sides furiously deny any such plans. Mr Jenrick has also lunched at 5 Hertford Street with Rupert Lowe, the Great Yarmouth MP who lost the Reform whip after a spectacular bust-up with Mr Farage. Even many moderate Conservatives, facing the loss of their seats, are now considering a merger. One member of the Leftish One Nation group said: 'A pact with Reform is inevitable now.' The MP added: 'There should be a non-aggression pact where we agree to not stand in the five seats Reform already have, and we let Nigel take his pick of seats where he is coming second to Labour. And Reform would stand down in seats we are more likely to win. 'It would end up giving them the North to save the Home Counties.' An insider said Tory leader Mrs Badenoch 'would not be able to do the deal' but added that the timing had to be right for her successor to do so. The source said: 'At the moment there no point doing any type of deal because Reform is on a high. Labour has imploded too early – all the benefit is going to Reform. Kemi isn't nimble enough to capitalise on it.' Mrs Badenoch is continuing to pursue a 'slow and steady' approach, and regularly speaks to Lord Maude. 'He tells her to be patient and give the public the chance to come around,' the source said. Even Mrs Badenoch's most vociferous critics say a leadership challenge is unlikely in the near future. Says one: 'She's 99 per cent safe until May. 'No one will want to own the next disaster – and there are a number coming down the line.'