What’s Your Opinion About the Budget?

Dominic Thomas
Nov 2025  •  4 min read

What’s Your Opinion About the Budget?

There was a palpable sense of adolescent schoolchildren during the Budget. The team here couldn’t quite fathom the petulant behaviour of adults. It didn’t help women’s causes that the three main characters seemed like characters from St Trinian’s, Grange Hill and Mean Girls. You can decide who was who.

The short version – nothing much happened. The Budget is often an exercise in shuffling the deck attempting to please the public who want more for less, the media who want sensationalism and the markets which want certainty. If we are honest the “greater good” should prioritise the planet, society and the economy in that order, but little is achieved without money, so the reverse generally holds.

A main problem that any Government has is that roughly 10% of all taxes ends up going towards servicing interest on loans the UK has received, (it’s now almost as much as the entire spend on education). This includes paying you your interest on your UK Government Bonds and Gilts or National Savings. As it is just the interest (not actually repaying the debt) market responses to a Budget can increase this considerably.

I’m not sure that I can really comment on the Budget without getting ‘political’, but … I think it’s a pity that:

  • Young people attempting to buy a home were not given any good news
  • The Landlord tax will likely only increase rents, which seems entirely counter-productive
  • Tax relief on pensions could have been simplified to a single rate for all
  • Working taxes are punishing work and are overly complicated. If you want to get people spending, raise the personal allowance and give it to everyone irrespective of income. I’d be bold with this
  • NI needs to be sorted properly and with gumption, employers have seen enormous increases in staffing costs, which results in both inflation and reduced new hires as well as possibly redundancies. I don’t know what the solution is, but I think I would amalgamate it into income tax
  • Small farms haven’t had any relief of note, these people feed us and look after the countryside and are being squeezed on their own margins. I think the £5m exemption would seem fairer
  • There is about £11bn of uncollected corporation tax that is hidden offshore by multinationals. This can and should be collected
  • I’m curious to know how EV mileage will be monitored
  • We need to encourage entrepreneurs who take a risk to start a business and employ people in good jobs with good salaries which generate tax. So the cut in reliefs isn’t helpful
  • Clearly tax simplification isn’t that simple

To me, tax is a bit like someone who plants a tree for future generations to sit in its shade, whilst never doing so themselves. It’s a price paid to the future.

I don’t pretend to have the answers and it is very easy to criticise a Government. I rewatched the disastrous Kwasi Kwarteng Budget of September 2022. I would imagine that most people would actually agree with his policies to reduce income taxes and welcome many of his proposals at the time, but we are beholden to the servicing of debt on the Bond market. All Chancellors are subject to the wisdom of Proverbs 22:7 “The borrower is a slave to the lender”.  [For your interest – it is generally believed that King Solomon wrote the Book of Proverbs.]

Anyway, perhaps you have some thoughts of your own?

What’s Your Opinion About the Budget?2025-11-27T14:28:54+00:00

Would you be hit by a Wealth Tax?

Dominic Thomas
July 2025  •  4 min read

Would you be hit by a Wealth Tax?

We live in a world that is lurching towards fascism, which is largely due to the failure of centrist Governments to address the inequalities in our society. Whilst evidently aware that the UK overspends and hasn’t enough income each year to continue to provide the services that we expect, sadly this Government, much like those before it, is adamantly refusing to tax the very wealthy (those with more than £10m of assets). Instead, they are taking a wrecking ball to the working and middle classes and small businesses with tax upon tax.

Plans to raise even more from inheritance tax (IHT)

We know that inheritance tax is unpopular and probably not because of the amount it raises (which is a fraction of taxes, accurately less than 1% of the total £857,821m) but rather more to do with the approach that Government simply taxes you again, taking bites out of the same money. Your savings have already suffered income tax, capital gains tax and possibly stamp duty and VAT, yet also finally succumb to inheritance tax.

The Fake Exodus

The failure of the current Chancellor, who in fairness is just as ineffective as all her predecessors over the last 40 years or so, is unable to appreciate the biases that she has – an inability to believe that taxing a few people more will not cause them to leave the UK with a proper wealth tax. Pandering to right wing reports of an “exodus” of millionaires from the UK, which is an utterly inflated and bogus interpretation of the available data, we, like the Chancellor and most politicians, are being fed the lie that we must allow the very rich to pay minimal taxes or risk their departure and then share the burden between those who remain here. In fact, our tax system is deliberately structured this way. The firm touting the narrative, seized upon by billionaire media moguls, is Henley and Partners – a company that basically specialises in servicing the ultra-rich. Its equivalent is a gun manufacturer distorting violent crime data resulting in fear and widespread gun ownership (ker-ching!) and … more violent crime.

Reality Check – Millionaires care about a thriving society too

The reality is that only 0.2% (zero point two percent) of millionaires migrate. This rate has barely altered. The Tax Justice Network and Patriotic Millionaires UK have both attempted to address this grossly deliberately misleading narrative, providing data and facts, but UK and global media outlets are rarely concerned with anything other than sensationalism and stoking division. It wouldn’t be a surprise if you had never heard of either organisation. It might surprise you to learn that 80% of UK millionaires support a 2% wealth tax. These are people who have at least £4m of net assets, which does include some of our clients.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves, like those before her, has fallen for it and is pressing ahead with frozen allowances, increases to NI and tax rises for inheritance taxes in particular, impacting anyone with an investment-based pension fund (you) or a farmer (we have a few farmer clients but not many). Whilst Henley and Partners have backtracked on their false and inflammatory statements about an “exodus”, the media has not caught up and neither has Reeves.

As a result, the gradual reduction of the welfare state, the sense of distaste that most of us have for our ever-rising bills and taxes, the billionaires and ultra rich continue to build wealth and remain largely outside of scope. The constant failure of the UK Government and in particular Kier Starmer, leaves the door open for an irate electorate to vote for change, sadly the party that garners attention (thanks to a more than willing media) is that of Reform and the duplicitous Nigel Farage, who is a Trump mimic and fans the flames of fascism. For some people he is a protest vote; but the evidence suggests that he is not merely a protest. His rhetoric (backed by very wealthy individuals like Elon Musk and businesses) calls for dismantling the welfare state (including the NHS) and taking an authoritarian approach – threatening our democracy. On the rare occasions that he and his supporters admit that Brexit has failed, he states this is due to Government not going far enough (by which he means far right enough). Whilst the focus may initially be on “illegal immigrants”  and abandoning plans to save our only planet, his “policies” or words will inevitably fail to address any real problems; his argument will always be that centrists (the vast majority of the electorate) didn’t allow him to go far enough, and so we are, in my view, at a crossroads. He also advocates “relaxing” gun laws and defended fascists (laughably calling them “concerned families”) attempting to burn down a hotel which may have housed asylum seekers. You know your history.

When new information comes to light, I am forced to rethink and change my mind – how about you? My role as your adviser is not to tell you how to vote, but to advise you about your wealth and how this aligns with your lifestyle and the general sense of wellbeing when contextualised within our society.  Successive Governments have all largely failed most of us except the very wealthy which doesn’t include you (or me) despite our combined efforts to save, invest, grow, innovate, employ, repay debt and minimise taxes.

Instead, an employed person earning say £120,000 will have tax rates of 62% whereas I can assure you that someone with sufficient capital will be able to generate the same level of income with tax rates no higher than 28%. Taxing income and taxing wealth are not even vaguely comparable. You will note that in the diagram about tax receipts, most of those taxes are paid by working people under State Pension age.

I’m actually of no particular political persuasion, I attempt to vote for who I believe will serve our country and planet best, not necessarily my own interests. The choices today are highly influenced by media bias and false representation. Somehow, we have to pick our way through the noise and vote for decent people who hold everyone’s interests; not simply those who have a particular distorted view of monoculture, a faux respect for the protection of women and children (look at what they vote to cut) and conveniently forget our history whilst at the same time portraying a distorted view of the past. It is time for hope, not hate.

Would you be hit by a Wealth Tax?2025-08-13T10:19:38+01:00

Your loss is your gain

Daniel Liddicott
July 2024  •  3 min read

Your loss is your gain

You may recall from my recent piece in Spotlight that capital gains tax exemptions have fallen yet again for the 2024/25 tax year. As a reminder, you can now realise gains of up to £3,000 before having to pay capital gains tax (CGT). This allowance was £6,000 last tax year and £12,500 the tax year before that. The reduced £3,000 capital gains exemption affects those of you with General Investment Accounts (GIAs) in particular, as these are not sheltered from CGT, unlike your ISAs and pensions.

It is now more likely than ever that moving funds from your GIAs into your ISAs and/or pensions may result in the need to pay some CGT, at 10% or 20% dependent upon whether you are a basic, higher or additional rate taxpayer. It is important to understand that you only “realise” a gain if investments in your GIA are sold, which is the case if the funds are being withdrawn or moved into an ISA, for example.

The reason for carrying out this strategy year upon year has been to gradually move funds out of the less tax-efficient GIAs into the tax-efficient ISAs and pensions, which are sheltered from paying tax on any future capital gains.

A key factor that we can use to help you to reduce or, in some cases, completely remove the need for you to pay CGT on gains within your GIAs is to register any losses made in previous tax years. You can actually register losses made in any of the previous four tax years, to be used to offset against any gains that you make in future. And you can carry these valuable losses forward indefinitely until used. Example incoming:

You can now “realise” gains of up to £7,000 without any CGT payable.

Unfortunately, these losses are not automatically registered with HMRC. You can do this either in your tax return for 2024/25 if you usually submit these, or you can write to HMRC instead. We are putting together a guide and letter template that you can use to send to HMRC to register losses to make the process as easy as possible.

We are currently looking back through the previous few tax years to determine who has made losses that can be registered and used moving forwards – if this is you, you should expect to hear from us in the next few months.

Whilst, generally speaking, falling valuations of your investments is a negative experience, we can help you to make the most of these. Your past loss can become your future gain.

Your loss is your gain2025-01-28T10:03:08+00:00
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