How to prepare for a Corbyn government

Labour takes aim: much higher taxes, much higher spending
Last week, The Sunday Times ran this headline: “Corbyn plot for cut price swoop on water giants.” The story – about how Labour’s plan is to privatise the UK’s water companies at a value of less than £20bn, rather than the £70bn everyone else reckons they are worth – was a timely reminder that the real risk to the finances of MoneyWeek readers is not Brexit itself, but that the mismanagement of Brexit leads to a Labour government.

Labour is promising much higher taxes, much higher spending and significant-sounding levels of asset confiscation. That’s not likely to be good news for anyone who has wealth or who is trying to build it (in which I include the 9.5 million people in the UK auto-enrolled into equity-holding pension schemes). The obvious question – and the one readers keep asking– is how does one prepare?
It isn’t easy. You might sell any property that isn’t your primary home – second homes, and buy-to-lets in particular, are the most obvious of wealth tax targets. Perhaps fix your mortgage on your main home while you are at it: unfunded spending promises will hit the pound, create inflation and push interest rates up. If you are a high earner (on £70,000-£80,000-plus a year) and have the capacity to bring income forward in order to avoid fast-rising additional rates of income tax (there is talk of 70%), now might be time to do that.
Also make sure that you are using up all your allowances: capital gains is bound to rise under a Labour government, for example. I’d also top up pensions and individual savings accounts (Isas), with the caveat that a Corbyn government could easily force redirection of the assets within pensions in particular. Can you imagine a scenario in which a fiscally bombed out government puts in place regulations requiring all pension assets over, say, £500,000-a-head, to be invested in, say, perpetual “national regeneration bonds?” Quite.
You could, for insurance purposes, also do the opposite of what we have been suggesting for a while and increase the non-UK element of your portfolio (selling anything vulnerable to nationalisation first). If the pound really does collapse, you’ll benefit from earning something in a foreign currency (and avoid rising UK corporation tax at the same time).
Also make sure that the portfolio you have going into the next election is one you will be happy with long term: a new financial transaction tax is likely. Finally, you could think about opening a bank or brokerage account abroad in order to have a head start on the capital controls that will have to be imposed with a major run on the pound. If anyone has any better ideas on preparation tactics please do email us (we will write on this again).
I still don’t think it is likely that the UK electorate will put in place a majority Labour government under its current leadership. I do think it is worth remembering how resilient our economy is: UK GDP growth has averaged 1.65% since the Brexit referendum, which puts it roughly in line with France, ahead of Germany and very far ahead of Italy. And I am also aware that many readers are entirely OK with the idea of fast-rising taxation. However, if we find ourselves close to a general election sooner than we should, those of you who are not should start thinking about how to protect the wealth you have worked to create.


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