People are leaving Britain in droves, we face a ‘growth emergency’ and Labour’s tax bonanza IS driving wealth out of Britain, admits Business Secretary

A Cabinet minister today made the extraordinary admission that Labour’s taxes are driving wealth out of Britain.

Business Secretary Peter Kyle said he was worried entrepreneurs were leaving in ‘droves’, adding that he would not ‘duck’ the impact of the higher tax burden and decision to abolish non-dom status. 

In a round of interviews as the fateful package looms, he also apologised for the chaotic briefing of what will be in it. 

The comments came amid rising concerns that billionaires and other wealth creators are leaving to avoid being targeted by Rachel Reeves.

A former Bank of England chief warned yesterday that the ‘fiscal fandango’ around Ms Reeves’ plans has caused ‘paralysis’.

Andy Haldane, who worked in Threadneedle Street for more than 30 years, said ‘costly’ speculation about tax rises had caused growth to ‘flatline’ in recent months.

Business Secretary Peter Kyle said he would not 'duck' the impact of the higher tax burden and decision to abolish non-dom status

Business Secretary Peter Kyle said he would not ‘duck’ the impact of the higher tax burden and decision to abolish non-dom status

The comments came amid rising concerns that billionaires and other wealth creators are leaving to avoid being targeted by Rachel Reeves

The comments came amid rising concerns that billionaires and other wealth creators are leaving to avoid being targeted by Rachel Reeves

The head of the CBI is pleading with Ms Reeves to ‘change course’ and avoid inflicting more cost pressure on UK firms.

At the business body’s annual conference, Rain Newton-Smith will urged the government to make ‘hard choices’ on spending instead of inflicting ‘death by a thousand taxes’.

It emerged at the weekend that billionaire former Labour donor Lakshmi Mittal has became the latest big name to quit Britain.

The Indian-born steel tycoon will now reportedly spend much of the future in Dubai and is registered as a resident in Switzerland for tax.

Asked about the reports, Mr Kyle told Sky News it was a ‘worry’ for the government ‘whenever anyone needs to leave the UK to succeed’. 

‘But what I don’t want to do is we as a country just focus just on the billionaires because there are other people that have needed to leave,’ he said. 

‘There are people starting businesses that have gone to America actually in their droves, because they haven’t had the funding that they need in this country to succeed. 

‘And that is something that we are fundamentally stopping the need for by recapitalising the markets here and putting a lot of work in for those spinouts and those start-ups, those scale up companies.

Pressed whether he acknowledged that ‘some of it is because of the tax decisions of this Labour government’, Mr Kyle said: ‘I do.’

He added: ‘Yes, I do, I do. Now I’m not going to duck the fact that we have put up taxes and we’ve closed some of the loopholes for non-doms. 

‘On the other hand, we’ve set up this, a global talent taskforce. We have set up a global talent visa. 

‘We are making it easy, easier for people to come here who have high talents. 

‘Now, some people are going to leave because they were here, because of the way that the old non-dom system works. 

‘There are other people who are coming to this country because of the excitement that’s in our economy at the moment. 

‘The fact that we’re investing in AI, that people like Jensen Huang from Nvidia, the biggest company in the world, says we’re going through a Goldilocks moment as a country when it comes to AI. 

‘So lots of people are coming here because of the new excitement in our country. But I accept because of some of the decisions we’ve made, like closing those non-dom tax loopholes, some people will feel the need to leave.’

Mr Kyle apologised for the rumours swirling around the contents of the Budget in response to concerns the speculation is hitting confidence in the economy.

Andy Haldane, who worked in Threadneedle Street for more than 30 years, said 'costly' speculation about tax rises had caused growth to 'flatline' in recent months

Andy Haldane, who worked in Threadneedle Street for more than 30 years, said ‘costly’ speculation about tax rises had caused growth to ‘flatline’ in recent months

He told Times Radio: ‘I’m not apologising on behalf of the people who are reporting on the speculation, because that would be absurd.

‘What I can apologise for is the fact that there has been so much speculation. I understand that it’s a distraction, but it is speculation and the reporting of such.

‘I’m here to talk about the facts of the economy right now. And the facts are that we are delivering schemes that are lowering the cost of energy for business in this country, we are delivering an industrial strategy, delivering stability in policymaking for 10 years into the future.

‘We have got a grip on the interest rates and the inflation challenges.’

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