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UK’s Reeves to consult on tax changes to woo high-earners

By Thomson Reuters Apr 14, 2026 | 8:25 AM

(Adds dropped word in first paragraph)

WASHINGTON, April 14 (Reuters) – Britain’s finance minister Rachel Reeves will consider making tax changes to make the country ​more attractive to high-earners living in the ‌Gulf who have been caught up in the turmoil around the Iran war.

Reeves will use a meeting of global financial policymakers at the International Monetary Fund this week to ‌say ​Britain is “open for business at a ⁠moment when geopolitical risk ⁠is reshaping decisions about where people live, invest and build companies,” a Treasury official, who asked not be named, said.

After being accused of chasing ​away some wealthy people by raising taxes, the government will launch a consultation on the taxation ⁠of Limited Liability Companies which ⁠has been raised as a concern ​by people considering moving to the UK.

“The Treasury will consult ​on options across the tax system to ‌keep the UK’s offer fair and competitive — including targeted reliefs for new arrivals and reforms to the treatment of offshore structure,” the Treasury official said.

Reeves was ⁠also due use her trip to Washington to pitch Britain as a “safe-harbour economy” with the government keeping a grip ⁠on the ‌public finances and investing in skills ⁠and infrastructure and new industries, the official said.

However, ​in ‌its latest set of economic forecasts, ​the IMF ⁠cut Britain’s economic growth forecast by the most for any large rich economy in 2026 to 0.8% due to the country’s costly exposure to the inflationary impact of the Iran war.

(Writing by William Schomberg, editing ​by Andy Bruce)