Daily Mail

Musk whips up tech storm

- Alex Brummer CITY EDITOR

TECH is America’s last wild frontier. Lack of regulation makes it relatively easy for Elon Musk to pony up £34bn in a matter of days, and with a combinatio­n of bombast and guile acquire Twitter in the name of free speech.

In spite of the big beasts of tech regularly being summoned to testify before Congress, efforts to tame their ambition fizzle out.

This speaks volumes to the power of lobbyists on Capitol Hill and a fundamenta­l belief in the US that barriers should only be reluctantl­y erected against red-in-toothand-claw capitalism.

There is nothing new in the unwillingn­ess of the authoritie­s to get in the way. It was several decades after the building out of America’s railways before the Interstate Commerce Commission was establishe­d in 1887. It was only after John D Rockefelle­r grasped control of 90pc of oil production that Teddy Roosevelt moved against Standard Oil.

The EU and Britain, which lack their own digital giants, are less tolerant of big tech’s ruthless ambition.

We all live daily with GDPR, which is Europe’s sweeping law on online privacy affecting every outlet from giants such as Facebook to the local florist. There is also legislatio­n to protect citizens from harmful online content. Brussels has shown no hesitation in attacking Apple over tax arrangemen­ts with Ireland on competitio­n grounds.

Musk could potentiall­y use Twitter to advance the interests of Tesla or his satellite project SpaceX. The nearest Congress has travelled towards interferin­g with Silicon Valley are proposals to strengthen privacy rules.

But with a combined market value of an estimated £5 trillion, Alphabet, Meta, Apple et al have become states within a sovereign nation and essentiall­y set their own rules.

Musk makes the case for free speech at Twitter, arguing against the kind of censorship which stops Donald Trump from tweeting. But can a dominant owner really be the answer to what is regarded as the globe’s speediest and most raw news site?

Musk has shown again an ability to bulldoze Wall Street into submission, turning a stake acquired in the open market into full control, unfazed by the usual discipline­s.

But this latter-day Croesus and his fellow tech billionair­es need to be better corralled.

Hard Labour

IF Rachel Reeves is the acceptable face of Keir Starmer’s Labour, then be worried.

Her rush to abolish non-domicile status politicall­y keeps attention focused on tech heiress Akshata Murty, the spouse of Chancellor Rishi Sunak, and the Tory front bench. Murty pledges to pay UK taxes on her overseas earnings but has not disavowed her non-dom status.

Reeves’s move is a reminder that Labour is not a friend of wealth, enterprise and entreprene­urship. Jeremy Corbyn and Ed Miliband proposed similar policies. Gordon Brown thought about it but pulled back from the brink.

Plainly, rules for non-doms need to be modernised. Inheritanc­e of the rights from a father is antiquated. The annual charge for non-dom rights is too low. Reeves’s claim that New York has more billionair­es than London even though Americans pay tax on their worldwide income is fallacious. The Big Apple is financial HQ for an economy ten times that of the UK.

Labour needs to recognise that the 75,700 people declaring non-dom status in 2019-20 did not get a free ride. They contribute­d £7.85bn in taxes to the Exchequer. It would be easy for them to waltz off to say Portugal, which welcomes riches.

Non-domicile status may be the first tax break to fall, but what comes next?

Among the threats could be a return to 50pc or higher income tax, axing or limiting tax allowances for ISA saving and pensions, heftier stamp duties on house purchases and share dealing and an end to inter-generation­al gifting. Careful what you wish for.

Land rights

HYBRID and working from home has raised big questions about central London office space. The sale of a 75pc stake in British Land’s Paddington Central developmen­t for £694m can be read both ways.

The buyer, Singapore wealth fund GIC, obviously believes there is still value in London and UK real estate. BL’s tilt away from central London to a mixed-use project at Canada Water and logistics suggests a coolness towards entreprene­urial, careful assembly of core London assets, so much part of its DNA. Newish chief executive Simon Carter is voting with his feet.

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