Reeves now eyeing Stamp Duty and Council Tax reform to raise billions | Politics | News


Rachel Reeves is reportedly eyeing up two massive tax overhauls to both Stamp Duty and Council Tax, in an effort to rake in billions more for her spending priorities. According to new reports, the Treasury is looking at a major change to Britainโ€™s property taxes, which many argue are flawed as they reduce house sales and provide a highly inconsistent revenue stream for the government.

The current Stamp Duty levy is paid by house buyers when purchasing a property over ยฃ125,000, or ยฃ500,000 for first-time buyers. From there, rates begin at 2% up to ยฃ250,00, 5% up to ยฃ925,000, 10% up to ยฃ1.5 million and 12% on anything beyond that. Ms Reeves is instead looking at replacing this with a new simpler system, that would be paid by the property owners upon selling their house. The national property tax would be paid by owner-occupiers on houses worth more than ยฃ500,000, directly collected by HMRC, while stamp duty would remain for purchases of second homes.

The Treasury believes that while this new system would raise similar amounts to Stamp Duty, it would be a more reliable and consistent source of revenue.

It would only affect around one in five house sales, compared to Stamp Duty applying to 60% of sales.

According to the Guardian Ms Reeves is also examining proposals for a radical overhaul of Council Tax, which could be replaced with an annual local property tax following the introduction of her proposed property tax.

Council tax is under huge fire by Labour MPs, as many of the poorest homes pay more each year than mansions in central London.

The current rates were set in 1991 and havenโ€™t been updated since, due to fear of political backlash by affluent voters in the south.

The Treasury document examining a new council tax system is based on a report by the centre-right Onward think tank, which proposed that owners of property up to ยฃ500,000 paying rates of tax based on the value of their home.

The minimum annual charge would therefore be set at around ยฃ800 a year.

Onwardโ€™s paper explained: โ€œIt means homes in Barnsley, where few pay stamp duty, would be valued high enough to start paying a national property tax. Such an approach would better fund local authorities without councils in poorer areas setting a high value or relying more on central Government handouts. It would also avoid a scenario where the majority of property taxes for people living in affluent areas would go to the nation’s coffers instead of funding local services.โ€

However the paper also called for anyone who has paid stamp duty on their current property to be exempt, so they arenโ€™t taxed twice.

The move could also help cool tensions in the Labour Party, as property taxes are a form of wealth tax that many Labour MPs have been calling for.

However itโ€™s a political risk, as wealthy southern homeowners in constituencies that voted Labour for the first time last year could switch their allegiances, and it would likely take another term in office for Ms Reeves to complete.

A spokesman for the Treasury said: โ€œAs set out in the plan for change, the best way to strengthen public finances is by growing the economy โ€“ which is our focus. Changes to tax and spend policy are not the only ways of doing this, as seen with our planning reforms, which are expected to grow the economy by ยฃ6.8bn and cut borrowing by ยฃ3.4bn.

โ€œWe are committed to keeping taxes for working people as low as possible, which is why at last autumnโ€™s budget, we protected working peopleโ€™s payslips and kept our promise not to raise the basic, higher or additional rates of income tax, employee national insurance or VAT.โ€

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.