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*Sent:* Tuesday, March 09, 2010 10:43 AM
*Subject:* 50% rate will make London the tax capital of the world


  50% rate will make London the tax capital of the world



London will become the most highly taxed financial centre in the world when
the new 50 per cent income tax rate for those earning £150,000 or more comes
into force next month.

Taxes will be higher than for financial workers living in the other key
centres of New York, Paris, Frankfurt, Geneva, Zurich, Dubai and Hong Kong,
KPMG calculated.

The findings will raise fears that Labour's levies are driving businesses
and bankers overseas and threatening Britain's competitiveness.



Exodus: There are fears that Labour's new 50 per cent income tax rate for
those earning £150,000 or more, will drive businesses and bankers overseas

He also accused Labour of 'criminal negligence' by racking up a budget
deficit in the boom times rather than saving money for a rainy day.

'The UK economy is an utter disaster on any number of fronts,' Mr Smith
said.

Tullett announced last December that it will help employees move abroad if
they want to avoid the top rate of tax, and Mr Smith said workers are
already looking at relocating.

Graeme Leach of the Institute of Directors said: 'The 50 per cent rate is a
policy that should never have been announced. The indirect impact on
entrepreneurial aspiration, business confidence and foreign investment is
likely to be significant.

'We suspect that little or no money will be raised and we urge the next
government to reverse the increase as soon as possible.'

Labour's windfall tax on city bonuses has also led to anger in the City.
That imposes a 50 per cent one-off charge on the banks themselves for any
bonus that they pay out in excess of £25,000.

However the banks have not changed their behaviour. They are still handing
out multi-million pound packages, but are forcing shareholders to pay for
the levy, rather than risk annoying their top traders by taking it out of
the bonus pool.

Tax minister Stephen Timms denied last week that the higher rate would harm
the UK.

He said: 'It affects one per cent of the population. It is right that those
with the broadest shoulders bear their share of responsibility during the
consolidation.'

London today ranks sixth out of the eight key financial centres, in terms of
the tax burden for high earners.

But when the new rate comes into force the UK jumps to the top of the list
with the most onerous tax burden for any worker earning £500,000 or more.






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