Labour's Rachel Reeves vows to raise extra £5bn for NHS and schools by bolstering efforts to tackle tax avoiders

8 April 2024, 23:13 | Updated: 9 April 2024, 00:12

Rachel Reeves MP, Labour Party Shadow Chancellor.
Rachel Reeves MP, Labour Party Shadow Chancellor. Picture: Alamy
Kieran Kelly

By Kieran Kelly

Labour has pledged to raise an extra £5.1bn a year by bolstering efforts to crack down on tax dodgers.

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

The party will look to raise the money by the end of the next Parliament by narrowing the "tax gap" - the difference between the amount of money HMRC is owed and the amount it actually receives.

It will also raise £2.6 billion over the next Parliament by closing "loopholes" in the Government's plans to abolish exemptions for "non-doms", people who are not "domiciled" in the UK for tax purposes.

The announcement comes a month after the party's spending plans were thrown into disarray by the Chancellor's decision to adopt two of its revenue-raising policies at the Budget to fund a cut in national insurance.

Rachel Reeves will join LBC's Nick Ferrari at Breakfast tomorrow morning. Listen live from 7am on Global Player.

The two policies - abolishing "non-dom" tax exemptions and extending the windfall tax on oil and gas companies - had been earmarked by Labour to fund additional NHS appointments and free breakfast clubs for all primary school pupils.

As a result, the party has had to find another way to pay for those promises and now plans to raise the money it needs by cracking down on tax dodgers.

Read More: Labour pledges to give every child with diabetes glucose monitoring technology

Read More: Labour to tackle falling MMR jab rate with new children's medical record in NHS app

Shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves said: "I have been clear that everything in our manifesto will be fully costed and fully funded. There will be no exceptions.

"That is why last month I promised to go through all the Government documents in an orderly way to identify the funding streams to honour our commitments to the NHS and schools.

"That process is now complete and the funding a future Labour government will raise from taking on the tax dodgers will fund more appointments in NHS hospitals, new scanners, extra dentist appointments and free breakfast clubs for all primary school pupils."

Labour said the tax gap had widened to £36 billion in 2021/22, £5 billion more than it had been the previous year, as an under-resourced HMRC struggled to collect revenues and manage compliance.

The party said it would invest up to £555 million a year in boosting the number of compliance officers at HMRC, increasing productivity and improving the organisation's "dire" customer service.

It will also consider requiring more tax schemes to be registered with HMRC to make sure they were legitimate, and plans a focus on offshore tax compliance.

Ms Reeves continued: "At a time when working people in Britain are being asked to pay more in tax because of the Conservatives' economic failures, it is wrong that a minority continue to avoid paying what they owe.

"After 14 years in power, the Conservatives have failed to tackle this issue and the tax gap remains unacceptably high. With Labour, things will change. We will take on the tax dodgers because if you make your home and do your business in Britain, then you should pay your taxes here too.

"The plan we are announcing today will give HMRC the resource it needs to go after those who are avoiding or evading tax, and to modernise the tax office so we have a system that is fit for purpose."

While the measures are expected to raise more than £5 billion a year by the end of the Parliament, only £2 billion of that money will go to funding NHS appointments and primary school breakfast clubs, with the rest of the money being kept back for other priorities.

At last year's Budget, the Government proposed measures to reduce tax avoidance, including doubling the maximum prison sentence for tax fraud, but estimated it would have little impact on revenues.

In the 2024 Budget, the Government included plans to tackle outstanding tax debt, which are expected to raise £1 billion per year.

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

Rescue workers search the site of a building collapse in George, South Africa

Rescue effort boosted as survivor found after South Africa building collapse

Two watches belonging to Michael Schumacher on display during a preview at Christie’s in Geneva, Switzerland

Eight watches owned by Michael Schumacher up for auction

King Charles reveals side-effect of ongoing treatment in emotional chat with cancer sufferer

King Charles reveals side-effect of ongoing treatment in emotional chat with cancer sufferer

King Charles says William is a "very good pilot indeed" as he makes him chief of Harry's old regiment in snub to son

King Charles says William is a 'very good pilot indeed' as he makes him chief of Harry's old regiment in snub to son

File image of mother breastfeeding her newborn baby in hospital

Mothers left covered in blood for hours and told to 'stop stressing', report into 'shockingly poor' maternity care finds

An Emirates Airbus A380 jumbo jet lands at Dubai International Airport in Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Emirates sees £3.7bn profit in 2023 as airline takes flight after pandemic

Angela Merkel

German ex-leader Angela Merkel’s memoirs to be published in November

People walk with their belongings to the evacuation point in front of a building that was damaged by a Russian airstrike in Vilcha, near Vovchansk, Ukraine

Zelensky says army locked in ‘fierce’ border battles amid Russian assault

Michael Cohen

Trump trial arrives at pivotal moment as Michael Cohen poised to give evidence

Rishi Sunak said "the next few years will be some of the most dangerous yet most transformational our country has ever known"

Sunak warns of 'dangerous years' ahead and says he can keep British families 'secure' in pre-election pitch to voters

Exclusive
Archie Norman said police aren't interested in stopping shop theft

'We have to accept police aren't interested': M&S boss says company spends 'a lot of money' to stop shoplifting itself

People examine the damage at an area badly affected by a flash flood in Tanah Datar, West Sumatra, Indonesia

More than 40 dead after flash floods on Indonesia’s Sumatra Island

Rebbeca Joynes is on trial accused of six counts of engaging in sexual activity with a child.

Maths teacher Rebecca Joynes, 30, who ‘had sex with two students’ arrives at court arm-in-arm with her father

US secretary of state Antony Blinken

Blinken gives some of strongest US public criticism of Israel’s conduct in Gaza

Vicken Yegparian, vice president of numismatics, Stack’s Bowers Galleries, holds a golden coin once belonging to the collection of Danish king, Frederik VII, now part of LE Bruun’s collection, in Zeal

Vast coin collection of Danish magnate going on sale a century after his death

A new report will recommend a new category for proscribing protest groups.

Just Stop Oil should be treated like terrorist organisations, government-commissioned report says