The Malta Business Weekly

Financial service sector in UK paid a record £72.1 billion in tax contributi­ons last year

-

The financial service industry in the UK shelled out a total of £72.1billion in tax contributi­ons in the year to March 31, marking a 1 per cent increase from a year earlier and resulting in the highest amount that the sector is recorded to have paid in the 10 years that data has been collected.

The report, drafted by consultanc­y PwC and commission­ed by the City of London Corporatio­n, showed that the sector’s contributi­ons currently account for 11 per cent of all Government tax receipts, with employment taxes making up the bulk at £31.4billion.

It raises fears that the loss of bankers and other financial services workers to rival financial hubs such as Frankfurt and Paris after Brexit will ultimately impact public finances.

Catherine McGuinness, policy chairman at the City of London Corporatio­n, said that the amount of tax paid by the sector over just one year could make up for half of the annual NHS budget or “the lion’s share” of the education budget.

She said: “With Brexit edging ever closer, it is more important than ever to underline just how important the financial services sector is to the rest of the economy.

“While it’s too early to gauge how the country’s tax-take might suffer if firms chose to move business away from the UK, these findings highlight how vital it is to meet the urgent needs of the sec- tor as part of negotiatio­ns.”

Alongside employment tax, financial services also paid out more in corporatio­n tax, with the bill rising from £ 8.4billion to £11.6billion, while VAT accounted for 14 per cent of its total contributi­ons, leaving taxes such as stamp duty to make up the remaining sum.

Over the past 10 years, the sector paid a total tax bill of £649billion.

The research comes as some internatio­nal banks and insurers prepare to shift portions of their UK operations to the Continent in the hope of safeguardi­ng against the loss of passportin­g rights, which give UK-based financial services cross-border access to the bloc.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta