The Daily Telegraph

Spiteful Britain will pay a high price for attacking the wealth creators

‘Muddling through’ while targeting those who make a success of themselves is a path to economic misery

- SAM ASHWORTH-HAYES

History may not repeat itself, but it often rhymes. In April 1975, the editorial view of The Wall Street Journal on the UK’S prospects was summarised in a headline: “Goodbye, Great Britain”. Readers were warned that “the British government is now so clearly headed towards a policy of total confiscati­on that anyone who has any wealth left is discountin­g furiously at any chance to get it out of the country”. In April 2024, British tax advisers are warning foreign clients to “get out while you still can”.

While things haven’t yet reached their 1970s nadir – between the three-day week and soaring inflation, 1973-74 has a reasonable case for being our worst two-year stretch since the war – there are uncomforta­ble parallels. The WSJ was fulminatin­g against the “welfare state-manickeyne­sian syndrome” of the post-war consensus; the idea that the state would tax heavily to redistribu­te income, direct medical care for the population, and manage the consequenc­es through a series of price controls. Inflation, meanwhile, would raise revenue by dragging workers into ever higher tax brackets.

For Britain today, with energy bills capped by the Government, the NHS in its usual state of meltdown, and stealth tax by inflation now the centrepiec­e of state fiscal strategy, it’s a familiar list of woes. Today, as then, this mixture of policies enjoys strong support across the political spectrum.

The framework of the new political consensus is straightfo­rward: taxes will be high, spending higher, and wealthy foreigners in particular will be taxed until the pips squeak. Lowincome foreigners, on the other hand, will be waved through Britain’s open borders to benefit from the generosity of the welfare state.

For the past 17 years, the general direction of government policy has consisted of demanding the richest citizens hand over ever more of their incomes to subsidise the rest of society; 54pc of the British population receive more in benefits than they pay in taxes.

The top 1pc of earners, meanwhile, now pay roughly 29pc of all income tax; the top tenth a hair over 60pc between them. The latest manifestat­ion of this trend is targeting the small group of well-off individual­s who benefit from the non-dom rules.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has declared that the special income and capital gains tax breaks given to this group will now only last for four years, with changes to inheritanc­e tax to follow; Rachel Reeves would like to speed the second set of changes up. No matter which party wins the next election, taxes on wealthy foreigners look set to rise.

Abolishing non-dom status is essentiall­y a non-event from a fiscal perspectiv­e. Even under the Government’s forecasts the total raise is in the region of £3bn per year, or a little under a week of NHS spending. Even this may be optimistic; the small group of well-off individual­s who benefit from the current regime are by definition internatio­nally mobile, and are quite likely to be able to head overseas to friendlier jurisdicti­ons. If they listen to their financial advisers, they will almost certainly do so. In particular­ly pessimisti­c assessment­s, this could mean the Government’s tax raid ends up losing money. The question is whether anyone would care.

One of the more endearing parts of Britain’s national character is the desire for fairness and affection for the underdog. As Kipling wrote, the Saxon “never means anything serious till he talks about justice and right”. In many contexts these are admirable qualities.

At times, however, they can be twisted into something spiteful and destructiv­e. Look, for instance, at the attacks on private healthcare (“skipping the queue”), private schools or even Isas (which “overwhelmi­ngly benefit the better off ”).

None of these things makes others worse off. On the contrary, by relieving pressure on public services and increasing our national savings, they arguably benefit everyone. For the modern Left, however, these are inequaliti­es to be stamped out. As Margaret Thatcher put it, there is a strain of English politician who would “rather the poor were poorer, provided that the rich were less rich”.

As she went on to add, “you do not create wealth and opportunit­y that way”. Quite so. Then again, creating wealth and opportunit­y isn’t really the point of British economic policy. If it was, we’d be focusing on the root causes of our national decline. Instead, we’re targeting those who manage to make a success of themselves, raising corporatio­n tax, abolishing non-dom status, and squeezing the highest earners ever harder.

In 1975, the WSJ noted that Britain tends to “muddle through”. In that case, “muddling through” involved an IMF bailout, the Winter of Discontent, and a painful rediscover­y of economic reality. Fifty years on, we can only hope for a gentler landing.

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