Super-rich prepare to leave UK 'within minutes' if Labour wins election
The super-rich are preparing to immediately leave
the UK if Jeremy Corbyn becomes prime minister, fearing they will lose billions
of pounds if the Labour leader does “go after” the wealthy elite with new
taxes, possible capital controls and a clampdown on private schools.
Lawyers and accountants for the UK’s richest
families said they had been deluged with calls from millionaire and billionaire
clients asking for help and advice on moving countries, shifting their fortunes
offshore and making early gifts to their children to avoid the Labour leader’s
threat to tax all inheritances above £125,000.
The advisers said a Corbyn-led government was viewed
as a far greater threat to the wealth and quality of life of the richest 1%
than a hard Brexit.
Geoffrey Todd, a partner at the law firm Boodle
Hatfield, said many of his clients had already put plans in place to transfer
their wealth out of the country within minutes if Corbyn is elected.
“Lots of high-net worth individuals are worried
about having to pay much higher taxes on their wealth and have already prepared
for the possibility of a Corbyn government,” he said. “Transfers of wealth are
already arranged – in many cases, all that is missing is a signature on the
contract.
“There will
be plenty of people on the phone to their lawyers in the early hours of 13
December if Labour wins. Movements of capital to new owners and different
locations are already prepared, and they are just awaiting final approval.”
Dominic Samuelson, the chief executive of Campden
Wealth, which advises more than 3,500 rich families, said: “From the ultra-high
net worth perspective, a Labour government under Corbyn is a much greater
threat to them and their businesses and their wealth than Brexit.”
On Thursday, Corbyn singled out five members of “the
elite” that a Labour government would go after in order to rebalance the
country.
He claimed Mike Ashley, the billionaire owner of
Sports Direct and Newcastle United, was a “bad boss” who exploited his workers
through zero-hours contracts. Ashley hit back, telling the Financial Times:
“Corbyn’s not only a liar but clueless.”
The Labour leader also named the “greedy banker”
Crispin Odey, the hedge fund manager who made £220m betting against the pound
in the run-up to the EU referendum. Odey responded by telling the Daily
Telegraph: “Luckily they [Labour] can’t even run a campaign, let alone the
country.”
The others singled out by Corbyn were: Jim
Ratcliffe, the chemicals billionaire who has left the UK for tax-free Monaco;
the Sun and Sunday Times owner, Rupert Murdoch; and the Duke of Westminster,
who has a large central London property empire.
The shadow Treasury minister Clive Lewis went
further than the Labour leader, telling the BBC’s Newsnight programme:
“Billionaires shouldn’t exist. It’s a travesty that there are people on this
planet living on less than a dollar a day.
“There are people, when I walk into parliament, who
are sleeping rough on the streets of this country – the sixth-wealthiest in
this world.” He also described private schools as “engines of inequality”.
Josie Hills, a senior tax manager at Pinsent Masons,
said not being able to educate their children at Eton, Harrow or Winchester was
a key worry for many of the law firm’s rich clients, who were considering
moving to Switzerland and other low-tax countries with well-regarded private
schools.
“I would say 80% of our clients have thought about
the implications of a Corbyn government,” she said. “They tend to say they
sincerely hope it won’t happen but they want to be ready if it does. If that
means uprooting themselves and their families then so be it.”
John Caudwell, the billionaire founder of Phones4u,
has already vowed to leave the country if Corbyn becomes prime minister.
Caudwell, who has an estimated £1.6bn fortune, said a Corbyn-led government
would be “a complete fiasco” and he would “just go and live in the south of France
or Monaco”.
Corbyn has not set out precisely how he would target
the rich, but Labour’s 2017 manifesto pledged to impose a 45p tax rate on those
earning more than £80,000 and a 50% rate above £123,000. At present, the
highest income tax rate is 45% for those earning more than £150,000.
Labour would also significantly increase capital
gains tax and replace inheritance tax with a “lifetime gifts” levy, with a
tax-free allowance of £125,000 – less than half the current £325,000. There are
also plans to increase the corporation tax rate to 26%, up from the current
rate of 19%.
Corbyn’s plans for workers’ rights, with ideas
floated including a four-day working week and giving employees 10% of the
shares of big firms, are also of concern to the wealthy.
Peter Hargreaves, who has an estimated fortune of
£3bn and co-founded the stockbroker Hargreaves Lansdown, warned Corbyn’s plans
would be an “own goal and leave the country much worse off”.
He added: “It has been proven time and time again:
there is only so much you can tax a nation before the tax take starts to go
down because people will leave. My family will not be leaving, I love this
country and I have always been enormously patriotic.
“But
certainly the very, very wealthy people will consider leaving if you make it
intolerable. People are petrified of him [Corbyn], and what he might do.”
Hargreaves said the stockbroker employed about 1,700
people and had “created a vast amount of wealth for this country”.
He added: “If you create a tax regime that is not
going to welcome and support people like me who create wealth then you are
going to rapidly reduce the health of your economy.”
Hargreaves said he paid about £40m in tax last year,
and “if 50 of us [the biggest taxpayers] got on a plane and left, that would
put a big hole in the chancellor’s budget”.