The Budget’s millionaire exodus: Property mogul reveals he is ALREADY left UK to keep away from paying thousands and thousands on abroad earnings amid fears rich will flee of their droves due to Rachel Reeves’ £40bn tax raid
- £40billion scale of the tax hikes dwarf £8billion forecast in Labour’s manifesto
A property mogul today revealed he had already left Britain to avoid paying millions on his overseas income amid fears Rachel Reeves £40billion ‘tax bomb’ will drive an exodus of millionaires.
The Labour chancellor moved to forge ‘Red Britain’ today by hammering businesses, high earners and the middle classes – shifting the country decisively towards a European high-tax, high spending model.
But it appears a worrying number of the UK’s wealth creators are not willing to help make her left-wing dream a reality, prompting an early flight of ‘golden geese’ that risks slashing the Treasury’s tax take.
Bassim Haidar left the UK with his family last month due to concerns over Labour’s policies and is looking to sell the £80million luxury portfolio he has built up in London.
The 53-year-old, who moved to the capital in 2020, was a non-domiciled resident and decided to leave to avoid paying millions of pounds in tax on his overseas income when the scheme was abolished.
Millionaire Bassim Haidar (pictured) left the UK with his family last month due to concerns over the budget
April 2025. Chad West, a 33-year-old tech executive who previously worked for Revolut and is now vice president at another fintech, warned that wealthy people were ‘simply not willing to foot the bill for reckless spending’.
Top tax adviser David Lesperance warned of a ‘mad rush’ of high net worth taxpayers from the UK
He has relocated to Dubai with his wife and three children, aged 14, seven and one, due to the ‘uncertainty’ he faced.
Mr Haidar, who was born in Nigeria but has Lebanese citizenship, believes high-net-worth individuals like himself are being taken for granted and it is the UK that will be worse off when millionaires decide to leave.
‘My biggest concern was tax on global assets and inheritance tax on global assets,’ he told MailOnline.
Among the changes affecting the wealthy are a hike to capital gains tax and a curbing of reliefs that will bring in £2.5billion, while a massive increase in employers’ national insurance to drum up an incredible £25billion.
Ms Reeves also confirmed the Government will abolish the non-dom tax regime from April 2025.
Chad West, a 33-year-old tech executive who previously worked for Revolut and is now vice president at another fintech, warned that wealthy people were ‘simply not willing to foot the bill for reckless spending’.
‘The sheer number of tech founders and employees packing their bags for more tax-friendly destinations (Dubai, Spain, Portugal, Singapore) is worrying to say the least,’ he told MailOnline.
‘As for those who decide to stay, they are simply not going to sell any shares or other assets for the next few years. They’ll hang on in hope that this will be a one-term Labour government.’
Mr West said he would also avoid selling any of his shareholdings to avoid being stung by the capital gains hike.
‘A four per cent increase isn’t the end of the world, but there’s no value in me doing so,’ he said.
‘For example, if I sold all my shares in one of the companies I helped build, it would be an extra £400,000 tax bill with this increase.
‘It’s pennies by the multi rich, but not for grafters who took all the risk by starting companies and creating jobs.’
The axe to the non-dom scheme was first announced by Tory chancellor Jeremy Hunt and has been long trailed, yet according to leading tax and immigration adviser David Lesperance the details of Labour’s scheme were worse than feared.
‘There will be a mad rush to the exits before April Fools Day as high net worth UK taxpayers flee The Nightmare from Number 11 Downing Street,’ he told MailOnline.
‘Those UK taxpayers with significant capital gains dodged a bullet as no Exit Tax was announced. However, they are still within the target of the Chancellor in future budgets.
‘This Damocles Sword combined with a significant increase in capital gains tax rates as of April 2025 will predictably result in an exodus as taxpayers look to avoid not only higher rates, but any capital gains hit.
‘Carried interest tax rates are also increasing. This combined with the ability of those with carried interest to make and maintain their wealth outside of the UK, means that Golden Geese from the City will fly to more tax-friendly locations.’
Maxwell Marlow, of the Adam Smith Institute, said: ‘The abolition of the non-dom regime will drive away highly mobile wealth creators and so their tax contribution will decrease and they will invest less in our economy.’
Nigel Green, chief executive of financial advisory firm deVere Group, warned the exodus will leave ‘lasting scars on Britain’s economy’.
He added: ‘The UK has long benefited from the economic contributions of non-doms, whose direct and indirect investments and business activities have been integral to the nation’s prosperity.
‘The allure of the non-dom tax status has been a pivotal factor in attracting international talent and creating a dynamic business environment. Its removal is likely to signal a shift in the global perception of the UK as a favourable destination for wealth creation and business development.’
Mr Lesperance previously revealed he was helping eight clients make plans to leave the UK.
In other measures in the package revealed today:
- Ms Reeves said she would set aside £11.8billion for compensation for the infected blood scandal, and £1.8billion for victims of the Post Office scandal;
- The Chancellor insisted that she will toughen the day-to-day spending rules so the books must be balanced in 2029-30. From then on it will have to be balanced in the third year of the forecast;
- Employers’ national insurance contributions will rise by 1.2 percentage points to 15 per cent in April 2025, and the threshold for paying them will fall from £9,100 per year to £5,000;
- The state pension is projected to rise 4.1 per cent in 2025-26 – a £470 increase for over 12 million pensioners in the UK;
- Rail fares are expected to increase by 4.6 per cent next year;
- The stamp duty land tax surcharge for second homes will increase by two percentage points to five per cent, and will come into effect from Thursday;
- The OBR has predicted inflation will stay higher for longer than thought, sparking doubts about whether interest rates will fall as quickly as hoped;
- The Government is setting a ‘two percent productivity, efficiency and savings target for all departments to meet next year’.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves said the country had ‘voted for change’ and vowed to ‘invest’ as she mounts one of the biggest raids in history in the Commons
Insisting the country had ‘voted for change’ and it is time to ‘rebuild’, Ms Reeves vowed to ‘invest, invest, invest’. Spending is due to increase by around £70billion annually over the next five years.
But the OBR watchdog responded to the monster tax and spend bonanza by downgrading growth and wage forecasts, and warned inflation will stay higher for longer, potentially derailing hopes of interest rate cuts.
Real earnings are predicted to fall in 2026 as a direct result of the Budget, even though Labour promised to protect ‘working people’.
There were worrying signs as markets pushed up interest rates on the government’s debt mountain after Ms Reeves tore up fiscal rules to borrow up to £50billion more for big-ticket investment.
The respected IFS voiced alarm that the government had made ‘big gambles’ about being able to improve productivity, and might have to come back for more taxes.
The Budget also saw changes to inheritance tax, milking another £2billion through reducing benefits for estates and people handing down farms and shares. Pension pots passed on to relative will now be subject to the levy.
And second home buyers will be punished by pushing the stamp duty surcharge from 3 per cent to 5 per cent, effective from tomorrow.
However, in a bright spot for motorists, fuel duty is being frozen for another year.
And despite intense speculation the seven-year freeze on tax thresholds is not being extended again, meaning it will finally end in 2028.
Ms Reeves argued that the Tories left public services in tatters and more funding is essential – even though Rishi Sunak shot back that she had ‘fiddled the figures’ and much of the gap is down to bumper public sector pay deals she signed off.
Admitting that no Chancellor would want to be imposing such enormous tax rises, she claimed the OBR had concluded there were ‘undisclosed pressures’ on the ‘broken’ finances so the previous forecasts were wrong.
In her 77-minute speech, Ms Reeves said she is ‘deeply proud’ to be the first woman to be Chancellor in the 900 year history of the role, and the first woman to deliver a Budget.
She said Labour had rebuilt the country after the Second World War and was making the ‘right choices’ to ‘rebuild Britain once again’.
As she briefed the Cabinet on the contents earlier, Keir Starmer said it was ‘a huge day for Britain’.
Extraordinarily, despite the looming pain Ms Reeves pointed to a 6.7 per cent increase in the minimum wage to claim she is ‘putting pounds in people’s pockets’.
Ms Reeves said: ‘The only way to drive economic growth is to invest, invest, invest.
‘There are no shortcuts. To deliver that investment we must restore economic stability.’
On tax Ms Reeves said: ‘The scale and seriousness of the situation that we have inherited cannot be underestimated.
‘Together, the black hole in our public finances this year, which recurs every year, the compensation payments which they did not fund, and their failure to assess the scale of the challenges facing our public services means this Budget raises taxes by £40billion.
‘Any chancellor standing here today would face this reality, and any responsible chancellor would take action. That is why today, I am restoring stability to our public finances and rebuilding our public services.’
On inheritance tax, Ms Reeves said: ‘Only 6 per cent of estates will pay inheritance tax this year. I understand the strongly held desire to pass down savings to children and grandchildren, so I am taking a balanced approach in my package today.
‘First, the previous government froze inheritance tax thresholds until 2028. I will extend that freeze for a further two years, until 2030.
‘That means the first £325,000 of any estate can be inherited tax-free, rising to £500,000 if the estate includes a residence passed to direct descendants, and £1million when a tax-free allowance is passed to a surviving spouse or civil partner.’
On inheritance taxes applied to farms, the Chancellor said: ‘We will reform agricultural property relief and business property relief.
‘From April 2026, the first £1 million of combined business and agricultural assets will continue to attract no inheritance tax at all, but for assets over £1 million, inheritance tax will apply with 50 per cent relief, at an effective rate of 20 per cent.’
The OBR highlighted the stunning scale of the raid by Ms Reeves
The OBR said the Budget measures will take the tax burden to a record 38 per cent of GDP
The OBR warned that interest rates are likely to stay high for longer due to the Budget
The watchdog’s estimates are that real earnings will fall in 2026 as a direct result of the Budget
Disposable incomes are also being reduced by the changes made by Ms Reeves
Longer-term stats compiled by the Bank of England indicate that taxes are likely to have been lower all the way back to 1700
The Budget tax hike rivals 1993’s eyewatering revenue-raiser in the wake of Black Wednesday – and might be even bigger if measured at current prices rather than as a proportion of GDP
Spending will be nearly 5 per cent higher than before the pandemic by the end of the decade
Paul Johnson, director of IFS, said: ‘In broad brush strokes, that was the Budget we had been led to expect: big tax rises, more cash for public services, more borrowing and more investment. Look beyond the headline numbers, and there are two big judgments – one could say gambles – that the Chancellor seems to be making.’
He added: ‘The first gamble is that a big cash injection for public services over the next two years will be enough to turn performance around, and that many of the temporary spending pressures won’t persist.
‘If she’s wrong about that, and spending pressures don’t dissipate after two years, then to avoid cutting unprotected areas she may well need to come back with another round of tax rises in a couple of years’ time – unless she gets lucky on growth.’
The second gamble was whether ‘this extra borrowing will be worthwhile’, he added, pointing to pre-election plans which would have seen the UK borrow an average of £59billion per year over the next four years, which has now risen £85 billion.
Mr Johnson added: ‘A lot hinges on how well the Government spends the money. The additional investment is extremely front-loaded, which doesn’t fill me with confidence on how efficiently it will be spent – if indeed it is spent in that timescale.’
Laying out what she will do with the huge extra sums raised, Ms Reeves said: ‘Because I have taken difficult decisions on tax today, I am able to provide an injection of immediate funding over the next two years to stabilise and support our public services.’
The Chancellor said the next phase of the spending review will report in late spring, noting she has set the overall envelope at the Budget.
She said: ‘Day-to-day spending from 2024-25 onwards will grow by 1.5 per cent in real terms and total departmental spending, including capital spending, will grow by 1.7 per cent in real terms. At the election we promised there would be no return to austerity: today we deliver on that promise.
‘But given the scale of the challenges facing our public services that means there will still be difficult choices in the next phase of the spending review. Just as we cannot tax and spend our way to prosperity nor can we simply spend our way to better public services.’
Ms Reeves and her ministers smiled as they headed for the Commons this morning
NHS gets major cash injection as winter crisis looms
The NHS was a major winner from Rachel Reeves‘s first Budget as Chancellor as billions were poured into attempts to improve healthcare.
With waiting lists soaring, public health struggling and a staffing crisis the ailing system will get billions more thrown at it alongside new attempts at reform.
The Chancellor announced £1.5 billion for new surgical hubs and scanners and £70 million for radiotherapy machines.
An additional £1.8 billion has been allocated for elective appointments since July and the Treasury indicated ‘billions of pounds’ will be invested in technology to help boost productivity across the health service.
Health Secretary Wes Streeting (pictured on a visit to St George’s Hospital) has warned the additional funding set to be announced in Labour’s first Budget is unlikely to deliver major improvements
Last week Mr Streeting launched a ‘national conversation’ on the Government’s proposed 10-year plan for the NHS.
The Cabinet minister has vowed to ‘rebuild the health service around what patients tell us they need’, while transforming it into a ‘neighbourhood health service’ based more around communities than hospitals.
The plan will also see a greater emphasis on preventing ill-health and harnessing the latest technology as the Government seeks to drive productivity improvements across the NHS.
Private schools VAT raid confirmed for the new year
Rachel Reeves ploughed through loud criticism of her plan to make private schools pay VAT today as she confirmed it would come into force in January.
Starting in the new year, fee-paying schools will no longer be exempt from the tax, and will get no business rate relief, as the government looks to fund 6,500 extra teachers for state schools.
Critics of the plan have argued that the change is coming in too fast and could force some schools to close as parents pull their children out due to higher fees.
There are also fears of the impact on special needs schools, military children, and the effect of extra pupils entering the state system in the middle of the academic year.
Currently, independent schools do not have to charge 20 per cent VAT on their fees because there is an exemption for the supply of education.
The French and German ambassadors to the UK have also called for international to be excluded from the plans.
But supporters of the change say it is a long-overdue closure of a loophole that allows wealthy schools to avoid tax.
National Living Wage hiked to £12.21 an hour to give millions of lowest-paid Britons a £1,400 boost
Millions of the lowest-paid are in line for an inflation-busting pay boost after Rachel Reeves revealed large increases to minimum wage rates.
As part of her first Budget, the Chancellor announced the National Living Wage – for those aged 21 and over – will rise from £11.44 to £12.21 an hour in April next year.
The Treasury said the 6.7 per cent increase would be worth £1,400 a year for an eligible full-time worker and will directly benefit more than three million workers.
Meanwhile, the National Minimum Wage – for 18 to 20-year-olds – will rise from £8.60 to £10 an hour from April in a 16.3 per cent increase.
This will be the largest increase on record, with the £1.40 hike meaning full-time younger workers will have their pay boosted by £2,500 next year.
Labour said it was the first step towards achieving their general election manifesto pledge of removing age bands in minimum wage rates.
The Government intends in future to align the National Living Wage and National Minimum Wage to create a single adult wage rate.
The mimimum wage changes in April follows Labour’s instruction to the Low Pay Commission, which recommends minimum wage rates, to include the cost of living in its calculations.
The Chancellor said: ‘This Government promised a genuine living wage for working people. This pay boost for millions of workers is a significant step towards delivering on that promise.’
First-time buyers face paying thousands of pounds more in stamp duty
New homeowners face paying thousands of pounds more in stamp duty after Rachel Reeves ended a discount for first-time property buyers.
The Chancellor is set to rake in up to £2billion by not extending an increase in the thresholds at which people start paying the levy.
The Tories introduced a temporary change to stamp duty in 2022, pushing the tax-free threshold for all homebuyers from £125,000 to £250,000.
This also saw the tax-free threshold for first-time buyers increase from £300,000 to £425,000, as part of changes that were due to end on 31 March next year.
The Conservatives promised before the general election to make the stamp duty discount for first-time buyers a permanent change.
But Ms Reeves will allow the discount to expire next spring, which is expected to raise £1.8billion a year by 2029-30.
Among her Budget measures, the Chancellor also confirmed she will push ahead with Labour’s pledge to hike the stamp duty surcharge paid by non-UK residents.
New homeowners face paying thousands of pounds more in stamp duty after Rachel Reeves ended a discount for first-time property buyers
Those who are not present in the UK for at least 183 days during the 12 months before a property purchase are deemed non-UK residents for stamp duty purposes.
This means they have to pay a surcharge when buying a residential property in England or Northern Ireland.
An analysis by Savills showed first-time buyers in London would pay an additional £6,250 from 1 April, on average, when the tax-free threshold reduces.
This would be an increase from the current average level of stamp duty of £2,752 up to £9,002. The average property price for new homeowners in the capital is £480,040.
In the South East, where the average first-time buyer price is £314,675, first-time buyers would pay £734 in stamp duty, on average, after the discount expires.
The average first-time buyer in the South East does not currently pay stamp duty.
Millions of Brits face soaring travel costs as Labour increases bus fares cap to £3
Millions of Britons face soaring travel costs after Labour pushed ahead with an increase in the bus fares cap in England from £2 to £3.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves confirmed the move at today’s Budget despite warnings she is hammering lower-paid workers with a 50 per cent hike.
The £2 bus fare cap, which had been in place since January 2023, will be replaced by a new £3 cap until the end of 2025.
The £2 cap had been due to expire at the end of this year although, in their general election manifesto, the Tories had pledged to extend it for another five years.
Critics branded Labour’s decision to increase the cap – first announced by the Prime Minister on Monday – as a ‘bus tax’ and said it would impact on ‘working people’ across the country.
Millions of Britons face soaring travel costs after Labour pushed ahead with an increase in the bus fares cap in England from £2 to £3
Private schools Budget VAT raid confirmed in New Year despite fears for schools and students
Single bus fares in England have been capped at £2 outside London, where they are £1.75 per journey, for most routes, since January 2023.
When it introduced the policy, the previous Conservative government said routes with some of the biggest per-journey savings were between Leeds and Scarborough (£13), Lancaster and Kendall (£12.50), and Plymouth and Exeter (£9.20).
The new Labour Government said the £3 cap would save £12 on a ticket between Leeds and Scarborough, while a ticket between Hull and York would see a saving of £5.50.
The Budget also included almost £1 billion of additional funding for local authorities and operators to introduce new routes, protect existing ones and make services more frequent.
Rachel Reeves ploughed through loud criticism of her plan to make private schools pay VAT today as she confirmed it would come into force in January.
Starting in the new year, fee-paying schools will no longer be exempt from the tax, and from April will get no business rate relief, as the Government looks to fund 6,500 extra teachers for state schools.
Critics of the plan have argued that the change is coming in too fast and could force some schools to close as parents pull their children out due to higher fees.
The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) today forecast the number of students at fee-paying schools would fall by 35,000 due to the policy, driven mainly by fewer starting rather than those already attending them leaving.
There are also fears of the impact on special needs schools, military children, and the effect of extra pupils entering the state system in the middle of the academic year.
Currently, independent schools do not have to charge 20 per cent VAT on their fees because there is an exemption for the supply of education.
The French and German ambassadors to the UK have also called for international pupils to be excluded from the plans.
But supporters of the change say it is a long-overdue closure of a loophole that allows wealthy schools to avoid tax.
Starting in the new year fee-paying schools will no longer be exempt from the tax, and will get no business rate relief, as the Government looks to fund 6,500 extra teachers for state schools
Ms Reeves told the Commons: ’94 per cent of children in the UK attend state schools. To provide the highest quality of support and teaching that they deserve, we will introduce VAT on private school fees from January 2025 and we will shortly introduce legislation to remove their business rates relief from April 2025, too.
‘We said in our manifesto that these changes, alongside our measures to tackle tax avoidance, would bring in £8.5billion by the final year of the forecast.
‘I can confirm today that they will in fact raise over £9billion to support our public services and restore our public finances.
‘That is a promise made and a promise fulfilled.’
At the weekend it was revealed more than 100,000 children with special needs will be hit by the VAT change.
Price of pint to fall as draught duty cut by 1.7% – but drinkers still face higher booze prices
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has vowed to take a ‘penny off the pint in the pub’ as she slashed draught duty by 1.7 per cent – but drinkers will still face higher booze prices.
In her maiden Budget speech, Ms Reeves unveiled a major tax raid in an effort to plug what she claimed was a £22bn ‘black hole’ in public finances.
Despite pledges to ‘invest, invest, invest’ and to pump ‘more pounds in people’s pockets’, the Chancellor’s staggering £40bn tax bomb today has been dubbed by critics as ‘the biggest heist in modern political history’.
As part of her plans to try and overhaul public finances, Ms Reeves – who is just 118 days into her term as Britain’s first female Chancellor – has hiked bus fares, national insurance, and capital gains tax.
But she said that she would cut duty on draft booze in pubs in a bid to drive down costs for some punters, with a penny reduction for pubgoers getting draught beer and lager at their locals.
‘Nearly two-thirds of alcoholic drinks sold in pubs are served on draught,’ Ms Reeves told MPs. ‘So today, instead of uprating these products in line with inflation, I am cutting draught duty by 1.7 per cent, which means a penny off a pint in the pub.’
This means that all other tipples such as wine, whisky and gin, will increase as producers attempt to offset the hike – with furious industry chiefs accusing Labour of rowing back on their election pledges over the decision.