https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c1we3re197po
Plans to abolish non-dom status will be amended to allow a more generous phase out of tax benefits, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has announced.But the way some are reacting you'd think she'd junked the whole thing.
Reeves told an audience at the World Economic Forum in Davos that changes would be made to upcoming legislation to increase the generosity of a facility to help non-doms repatriate their funds to the UK.
Non-dom status enables people who live in the UK to avoid paying UK tax on money made abroad because their permanent home for tax purposes is outside the country.
Labour pledged to scrap the status in its election manifesto, saying this would address unfairness in the tax system and raise extra money for public services.
However, critics have raised concerns the changes could prompt wealthy people to leave the UK.
A report published earlier this week, external by global analytics firm New World Wealth and investment migration advisers Henley & Partners found more than 10,000 millionaires left the UK in 2024, a 157% increase on the previous year.
Analysts cited factors including additional taxes affecting non-doms and other wealthy individuals as well as the growing dominance of the US and Asia in the tech sector and the dwindling importance of the London Stock Exchange.