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The government has declined to rule out a "wealth tax" after former Labour leader Neil Kinnock called for one to help the UK's dwindling finances.
Lord Kinnock, who was Labour leader from 1983 to 1992, told Sky News' Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips that imposing a 2% tax on assets valued above £10 million would bring in up to £11 billion a year. Politics latest: Reeves's tax turmoil deepens On Monday, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer's spokesperson would not say if the government will or will not bring in a specific tax for the wealthiest.
Asked multiple times if the government will do so, he said: "The government is committed to the wealthiest in society paying their share in tax. "The prime minister has repeatedly said those with the broadest shoulders should carry the largest burden." He added the government has closed loopholes for non-doms, placed taxes on private jets and said the 1% wealthiest people in the UK pay one third of taxes.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves earlier this year insisted she would not impose a wealth tax in her autumn budget, something she also said in 2023 ahead of Labour winning the election last year. Asked if her position has changed, Sir Keir's spokesman referred back to her previous comments and said: "The government position is what I have said it is." On Sunday, Lord Kinnock told Sky News: "It's not going to pay the bills, but that kind of levy does two things.
"One is to secure resources, which is very important in revenues. "But the second thing it does is to say to the country, 'we are the government of equity'.
"This is a country which is very substantially fed up with the fact that whatever happens in the world, whatever happens in the UK, the same interests come out on top unscathed all the time while everybody else is paying more for getting services. "Now, I think that a gesture or a substantial gesture in the direction of equity fairness would make a big difference." The son of a coal miner, who became a member of the House of Lords in 2005, the Labour peer said asset values have "gone through the roof" in the past 20 years while economies and incomes have stagnated in real terms.
In reference to the chancellor refusing to change her fiscal rules, he said the government is giving the appearance it is "bogged down by their own imposed limitations.