Labour’s Wealth Grab Exposed: The Full Tax Hit List Revealed – and It’s Alarming!

PM Keir Starmer and chancellor Rachel Reeves refuse to say which taxes they will hike in Labour’s Halloween Budget on October 30. But they’ve got a little list.

Budget-tax-list

There’s a reason why the Labour Party didn’t tell us which taxes it would hike during the election (Image: Getty)

Labour ruled out increasing income tax, national insurance and VAT during the general election, but that still leaves plenty of taxes to go at. And as I’ve written recently, left-wing think tanks are full of ideas.

The Resolution Foundation is particularly influential. Its boss Torsten Bell is now a Labour MP, and earmarked for rapid promotion through the party’s ranks.

It has issued its tax demands in a string of policy documents and tweets, claimiong they will tackle the two biggest challenges facing the UK: low growth and high inequality.

Sadly, it doesn’t have many practical suggestions for boosting growth, but has loads of ideas that it claims will reduce inequality. With grim inevitably, they all come down to one thing: taxing anyone with a modicum of wealth.

I was astonished to see just how many taxes the Resolution Foundation wants beefed up. Worryingly, a large number are on Labour’s Budget hit list.

Which means they could potentially come into force in just six weeks.

Here’s what the Resolution Foundation wants Labour to do. Brace yourselves, it’s a lengthy list.

As I recently reported, it wants Reeves to increase inheritance tax receipts by scrapping the £175,000 residence nil-rate band, worth a maximum of £350,000 per family.

It has also suggested slashing the £325,000 nil-rate band to just £125,000, and imposing IHT on all lifetime gifts above £3,000 a year.

It also wants to slap IHT on unused pension savings on death, and axe business and agricultural property reliefs.

And that’s only for starters.

 

The Resolution Foundation also wants to increase capital gains tax (CGT) on share sales to 37%, and to a whopping 53% on sales of buy-to-let properties and second homes.

It also wants to introduce what has been called a double death tax, charging both CGT and IHT on capital gains when people die.

As I highlighted yesterday, it also wants to charge CGT when people leave the UK, as many will when they see what Labour has in store for them.

The Resolution Foundation isn’t done yet.

It wants buy-to-let landlords to pay national insurance on rental income, which they don’t at the moment. The self-employed should pay more NI, too.

It also wants to hike the basic rate of dividend tax from 8.75 to 20%.

Don’t think our pensions will go untouched, either. The Resolution Foundation wants to cut the £270,000 cap on the 25% tax-free lump sum to £100,000, or possibly lower.

Motorists will be in for it too, as it wants to scrap the 5p temporary cut in fuel duty, another hike I’ve warned about. Then it would increase the levy by 2% every year.

Oh yes and the Resolution Foudation also wants to introduce pay-per-mile road duty for electric vehicles.

That’s quite a shopping list. My head was reeling at the end of it. It feels like a wholesale nationalisation of private wealth.

I don’t expect Reeves to introduce all these taxes at once. If she did, it would be the longest Budget of all time. As well as the most hated.

But I could see every one of these tax hikes coming into fouce during five long years of Labour rule.

We’ll get the taxes, so will this achieve the Resolution Foundation’s twin target of boosting growth and reducing inequality?

I’m not convinced it will. Why bother to work hard and build businesses, if Labour takes yours gains away? Tax receipts could fall rather than rise.

It may reduce wealth inequality, though. By making everyone equally poor.