The only viable source of funding for investment in the UK is UK savers

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It became clear yesterday that Rachel Reeves' mad trip to China, accompanied by Andrew Bailey, who is Governor of the Bank of England, will raise no more than £600 million worth of new investment into the UK, spread over five years. I strongly suspect that much of this would inevitably have happened anyway, whether she had bothered to make this journey or not. The rate of return on her effort was, then, by the standards of such trips, staggeringly low and exactly what we should have expected. China has absolutely no reason to invest in the UK at present.

In truth, few other people in the world have any strong incentive to invest in the UK either. We have alienated ourselves from Europe. Trump is moving the USA onto another planet. China has made clear where it stands. No one else is either likely to be interested in investing here or have any significant means to do so. In that case, if Rachel Reeves is looking for a source of investment, she really should be looking at the people who live in the UK. As a result, she should give up the pretence that, somehow or other, she and Keir Starmer are going to make the UK open to business, which sounds very much like a phrase first coined by George Osborne and David Cameron, who it appears they wish to emulate. Instead, as I explained in chapter 14 of the Taxing Wealth Report,  it is entirely possible to make changes to the tax relief rules associated with both ISA and pension saving in the UK so that new investment of the type that Rachel Reeves is desperate to secure might be encouraged, from the people most likely to benefit from it, who are those living in the UK.

The vast majority of the £6 trillion or more of funds that are saved in UK pension funds, and the £700 billion or so of funds saved in ISAs, are deposited in socially useless activities. By this, I mean they are used to acquire shares that are not newly issued by the companies that give their names to them, meaning that no new investment in productive capacity or in employment arises as a result.

Alternatively, they are used for the purpose of property speculation, which has as its primary goal the extraction of ever-increasing amounts of rent from the UK economy, which only suppresses productive economic activity.

They can also be saved in corporate bonds, most of which are issued to fund merger and acquisition activity, the primary purpose of which is to boost the bonuses of directors of quoted companies.

Finally, they might be saved in cash, which we know does not give rise to any increased lending by banks, or in government bonds, which could fund socially useful investment, but only if the government was willing to hypothecate funds for that purpose, which it has not been to date in any significant amount.

I have proposed that all new ISA savings should now be required to be saved in ways that promote new investment in productive capacity, employment and sustainable growth in the UK, using a strict taxonomy to ensure that these conditions are met.

I have similarly suggested that one-quarter of all new pension fund contributions should be saved in this way.

If the government is to subsidise annual savings in these two arrangements by more than £70 billion a year, as it does, it is entirely reasonable to expect such investment take place in return as a condition of the tax relief that the saver enjoys. Otherwise, our tax system should not operate as a benefit system for the very wealthy, which is what it does at present.

Why won't Reeves deliver this simple, straightforward and guaranteed to be effective change? The only explanation must be that she does want to provide a benefits system for the wealthy, support for the socially useless activities of much of the City, and would rather that the UK have paper wealth now rather than real investment in those things that might make life for people in this country better both now and in the future.


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