U.K. Government Punishes Small Business, Middle Class in First Budget

LONDON — It’s not easy doing business in Britain, and soon it’s going to get a whole lot harder, especially for small businesses.

On Wednesday the Labour government set out its first budget, a brutal one filled with 40 billion pounds in tax hikes targeted mainly at small and medium-sized private businesses, the prosperous middle class, and the very wealthy.

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But what else would this left-wing party, which is back in power after 14 years, deliver? Rachel Reeves, the first female Chancellor of the Exchequer in British history, said she’s ready to restore economic stability and deliver national renewal — and she wants to make the wealth creators pay.

Reeves is ramping up capital gains tax, and putting extra pressure on employers by hiking minimum wage and increasing the National Insurance payments they make to the state.

She is also canceling long-standing tax breaks for all private schools, and abolishing the non-dom scheme, which offers tax perks to wealthy foreigners living part time in the U.K.

Reeves plans to replace the non-dom scheme with another, less favorable, one that her office argues will raise 12.7 billion pounds over five years. But will there be any rich left to tax?

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer (center front) next to Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner (front row, third from left) and Chancellor Rachel Reeves (front row, fourth from right) stand with Labour Party MPs, some of whom won seats in the 2024 General Election, at Church House in Westminster, central London. Picture date: Monday July 8, 2024. (Photo by Stefan Rousseau/PA Images via Getty Images)
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer with Angela Rayner and Rachel Reeves standing with Labour Party MPs following their election this summer.

Fear of higher Labour levies has already prompted international high net worth individuals, such as tech, retail and finance high-fliers living in the U.K. part time, to flee to tax havens such as Milan, Monaco and Dubai.

Reeves will even target them as they flee. On Wednesday, the Chancellor also unveiled a passenger tax on commercial flights, and private air travel, too.

Luxury jet-setters will, as of April, 2025 have to pay a maximum of 673 pounds per person in tax every time they fly, depending on the destination. As of April, 2026, they’ll have to pay 1,000 pounds per head.

The government’s aim is to fill a 22 billion pound “black hole” in the public finances, balance Britain’s books, raise money for public sector and infrastructure projects including hospitals and schools.

During her speech, Reeves also noted that the government has already attracted 63.5 billion pounds in global investment from firms such as Blackstone, Amazon Web Services, Macquarie, Eli Lily & Co. to support long-term infrastructure, green energy, AI and pharmaceutical projects.

Despite the lofty goals, Reeves’ plan failed to impress, with the British media describing her budget as “dismal,” “bleak” and the biggest “tax bomb” since 1993. The FTSE 100 index closed down 0.73 percent at 8,159.63, while private sector businesses said they were disappointed and worried about the future.