Wednesday, November 30, 2016

A bad time to be cutting Britain’s corporate-tax rate



PHILIP HAMMOND, the chancellor, made a few tweaks in his Autumn Statement on November 23rd but otherwise stuck to the fiscal policy set by his predecessor, George Osborne. A central plank of this stance is to keep cutting corporation tax, which is levied on company profits. The government hopes that will persuade businesses to invest in Britain. It might, but on political grounds it still looks unwise.


As firms have become more mobile, governments have had to work harder to keep them. The corporate-tax rate has tumbled across the G20 group of rich countries in recent years. Britain has led the way. Its rate was 52% in the 1970s. Between 2010 and 2015 it fell from 28% to 20%. Mr Hammond will bring it down to 17% by 2020. Theresa May, the prime minister, has reportedly told her EU counterparts that, unless she gets a good Brexit deal, she may slash the rate to 10%.

On one level, this looks sensible. Well before Brexit, companies were complaining about a slew of extra charges from the government. A levy to finance apprenticeships comes into force in April 2017; it will cost firms about £3bn ($3.7bn) a year. A higher minimum wage for the over-25s is now in force, ultimately raising wage bills by £4bn. Brexit itself has created the biggest headache. By following through with cuts in corporate tax, Mr Hammond hopes that he is “sending the message that Britain is open for business”.

That message will be heard by only a small number of firms, however. Fiat, an Italian carmaker (whose chairman is also a director of The Economist’s parent company), moved its tax residency in 2014. But only the biggest firms are likely to move to Britain in response to lower corporation tax. Within Britain itself, the tax burden falls disproportionately on a few heavy payers. All limited companies are liable, but a recent Oxford University research paper found that just 1% of British firms pay four-fifths of the total corporation tax bill.

For these firms, lower taxes will boost the expected future return on capital, thus encouraging investment. A paper from HMRC, the tax-collecting agency, looked at corporate-tax changes between 2010 and 2016 and suggested investment would be roughly £4bn-6bn a year higher as a result.

But at what fiscal cost? Those changes also deprived the government of about £8bn a year in revenues. The planned cut to 17% will ultimately cost another £3bn or so a year. The HMRC paper counters that higher investment leads to faster growth, and thus a higher tax take, so that within 20 years half the lost receipts could be recouped. But a paper from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a think-tank, criticises the methodology behind this conclusion. Among many worries, its simplest was that the estimates were subject to “a high degree of uncertainty”.

Uncertainty is especially high right now. British companies seem not to be in the mood to invest. The profitability of private-sector firms is at its highest level since 1998, yet capital spending is stagnant. A marginal decline in corporate tax pales in comparison with firms’ worries over workers’ measly productivity growth, Britain’s future relations with the EU or Mrs May’s refusal to guarantee the rights of the 3.5m EU citizens currently living in Britain.

A particular problem for Mr Hammond is that, even if the tax cuts do not blow a hole in the public finances in the long run, in the short term his fiscal needs are pressing. The budget deficit is 4% of GDP and he has set three fiscal rules, including a pledge that public-sector debt must be falling as a percentage of GDP by 2020. To this end, he has also retained other parts of Mr Osborne’s legacy, including a cut of more than £10bn from the working-age welfare bill by 2020, a move that most analysts see as highly regressive.

What’s more, for Mrs May to threaten the EU with a race to the bottom in corporate tax is hardly conducive to harmonious Brexit negotiations. Even businesses recognise that, politically, there is something iffy about the government’s approach. A big majority surveyed by PwC, an accounting firm, believe that the tax rate should either stay at 20% or not go below the 17% fixed for 2020. In purely economic terms cutting corporate tax may do some good, but for post-Brexit Britain it is at best a distraction. 


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