UK says the biggest companies must pay more tax

UK says the biggest companies must pay more tax

Britain will hike taxes on its biggest companies in 2023 as it begins to repair government finances in the wake of the pandemic, the worst economic slump in more than three centuries and the messy Brexit divorce from its largest trading partner.

Speaking in parliament on Wednesday, UK finance minister Rishi Sunak pledged another £65 billion ($91 billion) to extend emergency support measures for workers and businesses, while making the case that taxes will need to rise once the economic pain caused by the coronavirus pandemic has eased.

“Just as it would be irresponsible to withdraw support too soon it would also be irresponsible to allow future borrowing and debt to be left unchecked,” he said, cautioning that rising interest rates could make debt levels unsustainable.

The UK government has borrowed vast sums of money to fund over £400 billion ($558 billion) in stimulus during the crisis. Total government debt has soared to £2 trillion ($2.8 trillion), or close to 100% of GDP, a level not seen since the 1960s, according to the Office for National Statistics.

“It’s going to be the work of many governments over many decades to pay it back,” said Sunak, who took charge of the Treasury just weeks before the coronavirus crisis exploded in the United Kingdom last March.

UK GDP fell nearly 10% over the course of 2020, returning the economy close to the size it was in 2013. An ongoing nationwide lockdown imposed on January 5 is expected to hit the economy hard in the first quarter of 2021, while disruption to EU-UK trade following the Brexit transition period on December 31 is also weighing on activity.

Tax hikes

Sunak announced plans to hike corporation tax from 19% to 25%, which he said would still be below the level in most major economies. The higher rate will take effect in April 2023 and will only apply to companies with annual profits of £250,000 ($349,000) and above, affecting 10% of businesses, he added. Companies with profit below £50,000 ($69,800) per year will continue to be taxed at the lower rate, with a tapered rate introduced for profits above £50,000.

Business groups warned the tax hike could make Britain less competitive and ultimately undermine the economic recovery.

“Moving corporation tax to 25% in one leap will cause a sharp intake of breath for many businesses and sends a worrying signal to those planning to invest in the UK,” Tony Danker, the director-general of the Confederation of British Industry, the country’s largest business lobby group, said in a statement.

“The UK cannot forget it exists in a highly competitive global landscape. Changes to corporation tax need to be matched with a commitment to streamlining and simplifying the UK’s tax code,” added Miles Celic, CEO of TheCityUK, which represents financial services companies.

Thresholds for the basic and higher rates of income tax are also being frozen from next year, rather than rising with inflation, meaning some workers will also pay more tax.

Alongside tax hikes, Sunak announced incentives to boost business investment over the next two years. He has also extended reductions in sales and other business taxes until the end of September, with relief for hospitality, tourism and leisure businesses sustained into next year.

cnn