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Taxes will dominate next week's Budget, but which ones will Rishi Sunak raise?

City AM logo City AM 26/02/2021 21:30:09 Michiel Willems
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With all eyes on Rishi Sunak following the announcement of the recent government's roadmap out of lockdown, it becomes increasingly clear taxes are firmly on the chancellor's radar.

To zoom in on the challenges Sunak is facing, City A.M. caught up with, Tom Stevenson, investment director for personal investing at investment manager Fidelity International.

"In recent weeks it has become clearer that the government is determined not to re-open the economy prematurely. If this is really to be the final lockdown, then we are likely to proceed with great caution," Stevenson said.

Read more: Chancellor Rishi Sunak 'planning stealth tax rise' on wealthy pensioners in next week's Budget

The Chancellor's primary objective will continue for to be supporting the economy rather than repairing the country's finances, he noted, saying that "at the margin this makes unwelcome tax raids a little less likely."

However, in due course, the government cannot avoid a debate about the kind of country "we want to live in and what we can afford," Stevenson continued, "simply by looking at what the government spends money on, and the taxes required to pay for it. The conversation should start now but the conclusions can and should wait for another day."

"The country does not face a fiscal crisis despite this year's record levels of borrowing. Low interest rates mean we can afford to borrow the money and the Chancellor is likely to recognise that next week," he explained.

Read more: Budget 2021: What to expect from Rishi Sunak next week

Corporation tax

It was former Chancellor George Osborne who reduced the rate at which company profits were taxed from 28 per cent, to 19 per cent. There were plans to go even lower to 17 per cent, although these never made it in the end.

"Even if the corporate tax rate were to rise to 23 per cent, we would still be more lightly taxed in this area than the OECD average. Doing so would raise £14bn a year. Shareholders would obviously pick up the tab," Stevenson said.

Capital gains tax

Last year, the Chancellor ordered a review of capital gains tax and the Office of Tax Simplification concluded that the current rules were 'counter intuitive' and created 'odd incentives'.

"This is because CGT is taxed at a lower rate than income. Aligning CGT with income tax could raise a further £14bn a year," Stevenson noted.

Depending on how any changes are implemented, he expects that a tightening of the CGT regime could hit property owners, business owners and people "sitting on uncrystallised capital gains," so he thinks it is unlikely an increase will be included in this Budget, although it is likely to happen in due course.

Read more: British family sells $10m Van Gogh to avoid rise in capital gains tax

Pensions tax relief

It would not be the runup to a Budget if alarm bells were not sounding about the government finally grasping the nettle of how pension contributions are privileged by the tax system, remarked Stevenson.

"Chancellors have looked over this particular abyss before and stepped back. It would be particularly unpopular in Conservative heartlands," he said, although he added the current system clearly benefits higher earners the most and the potential savings are significant.

Stevenson's verdict is that the probability in this Budget is low.

One-off wealth tax

An upcoming report from the Treasury Select Committee is expected to include a proposal for a one-off wealth tax. A report from the Wealth Tax Commission last year said a one-off levy of 5 per cent on assets in excess of £500,000 could raise a massive £260bn.

The Chancellor is reported to be against the idea but if he were looking at a single measure that could put the UK's finances back on track, "a version of this might fit the bill," said Stevenson. However, "this feels too radical," he added.

Read more: Chancellor Rishi Sunak 'planning stealth tax rise' on wealthy pensioners in next week's Budget

Personal Tax Allowances

Then, finally, personal tax allowances. Stevenson called this "probably the easiest target of all" because freezing the levels at which individuals start to pay tax and move into higher tax bands is a 'stealth tax'.

"Like inflation, it is a way of dipping into people's pockets without many of them noticing. The £6bn potential increase to government revenues is not to be sniffed at either," Stevenson added, concluding that he considers this scenario highly likely.

The post Taxes will dominate next week's Budget, but which ones will Rishi Sunak raise? appeared first on CityAM.

vendredi 26 février 2021 23:30:09 Categories: City AM

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