BRITISH
MINISTER CRITICISES GOVERNMENT ON NON-DOM TAX
London, February 8, 2008 (IANS)
The
British trade and investment minister said a controversial government
proposal to tax foreigners who live in Britain but earn abroad could
threaten London's role as a world finance centre. Lord Digby Jones,
who recently led a large business delegation to India, criticised
the plans to charge an annual £30,000 ($58,453) fee on the
so-called non-domiciles, saying it made it harder for him to sell
Britain as a destination for skilled foreign workers and inward
investment.
He
told the Financial Times newspaper that the tax proposal was considered
to be a "serious issue" by the financial services industry
in Britain, and added that he had been frequently asked about it
on trips to India and the Gulf. "It has caused people to say
'Does this mean you don't want us?'," he said Thursday, warning
that Britain may lose its "badge as the place to come and bring
your skill and work hard in the developed world".
"I
can give you five reasons as to why you should invest in Britain
before you go and invest anywhere else in Europe. But maybe there
were seven and now there are five," Jones added. His comments
come amid concerns that the tax would cause a flight of wealthy
non-domiciles to countries such as Switzerland.
Jones,
a businessman who was drafted into the government by Prime Minister
Gordon Brown, said he had not been consulted about the proposals.
Non-domiciles
were also worried about the possibility of greater intrusion into
their affairs by the tax authorities, he said. "It's also a
'How much do you want to know about me?' bit, as well as the 30,000
pounds," he said.
However,
he said the fact that the £30,000 tax would only be effective
after seven years of domicile in Britain meant the country would
still remain an attractive place for young foreigners to live and
work in. "We've got to get the message across to these people
that it's seven years before this begins to bite," Jones said.
The
tax, proposed in October last year, is under a period of consultation
at the moment. The proposal followed a demand by the opposition
Conservative Party, which says there are 150,000 wealthy non-domicile
taxpayers such as Indian steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal living in Britain,
and that if each paid a tax of £25,000 the treasury would
be richer by £3.5 billion.
Non-domiciles
do not have to pay taxes in Britain on account of a 208-year-old
tax loophole. At the same time, an increasing number of them have
been donating money to political parties. Of the £188 million
raised by all political parties from donations since 2001, £17.5
million pounds have come from the so-called 'non-doms'. Of this
sum, £8.9 million went to Labour and £5.6 million to
the Conservatives. Mittal, one of the world's richest men, has donated
more than £4 million to the Labour Party.
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