Rachel Reeves warned UK ‘woeful’ on key economic issue | Politics | News

The UKโs tax competitiveness has been branded โwoefulโ amid warnings that Rachel Reevesโs Budget next month could make it worse. Britain is โcontinuing to languishโ in 32nd place out of 38 OECD countries in terms of overall tax competitiveness, ahead of only Italy and France in the G7.
This is the same overall position as last year in the International Tax Competitiveness Index by the US-based Tax Foundation. Daniel Herring, the Centre for Policy Studiesโ (CPS) head of economic and fiscal policy, said: โThe UKโs continued lack of tax competitiveness would be a concern for any Chancellor ahead of a Budget where tax hikes are widely mooted.
โRachel Reeves should resist the urge to crank up pressure on businesses and instead learn from our international competitors. Our current tax system is already uncompetitive and anti-growth โ the country cannot afford for things to get worse.โ
Labourโs increases in capital gains tax and employersโ National Insurance have seen the UKโs ranking on personal taxation fall sharply, from 20th to 25th.
Meanwhile, the property tax system in the UK has been judged as the second-worst in the world because of โits high rates and bad designโ, the CPS said.
The think tank called for Ms Reeves to abolish stamp duty on land and shares to help lift the UKโs overall rank to 31st.
Meanwhile, returning the headline corporation tax rate to 19% would improve the UKโs rank for business taxation by 16 places to 12th.
A Treasury spokesman said: โThe Budget will strike the right balance between making sure that we have enough money to fund our public services while ensuring we can bring growth to boost living standards.
โWe have capped corporation tax and without our action, business rates relief for retail, hospitality and leisure would have ended completely in April this year. Instead, we have protected business rates bills from inflation and extended relief at 40% for 250,000 businesses.โ