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UK employers ask government to ease off on tax and price-gouging claims

UK employers ask government to ease off on tax and price-gouging claims

By David MillikenWed, June 3, 2026 at 11:04 PM UTC

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People walk in the financial and business district of Canary Wharf as a Docklands Light Railway train passes by, in London, Britain, April 13, 2026. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs

By David Milliken

LONDON, June 4 (Reuters) - The Confederation of British Industry called on Britain's government not to treat business as a cash ‌cow or accuse companies of price-gouging as the country expects to ‌struggle with a cost-of-living shock triggered by the Iran war.

The employer organisation said 31% of British ​tax revenues last year came from business, the highest proportion since comparable records began in 1998.

"Business is not a cash tap that can be turned on without consequence ... You cannot tax your way to growth, and we must not try," ‌CBI Chief Executive Rain Newton-Smith ⁠said in remarks ahead of the body's annual dinner in London.

Britain's Labour government sought business support ahead of its sweeping ⁠July 2024 election victory, but the relationship soured after finance minister Rachel Reeves sharply increased employers' social security contributions in her first budget.

The CBI said that cost £27 ​billion ($36 billion) ​last year, equivalent to the cost ​of employing 1.3 million young people ‌on the minimum wage at a time when the government is worried about rising youth unemployment.

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More recently, Reeves said she was ready to give regulators extra powers to tackle price-gouging, following concerns that heating oil companies unfairly jacked up prices at the start of the Iran war.

The CBI said it was ‌wrong to suggest to the public that ​businesses were taking advantage of the situation.

"The narrative ​of profiteering and price-gouging is ​not just wide of the mark, it's deeply damaging," Newton-Smith ‌said, adding that many firms were "paddling ​furiously" to stay afloat.

With ​Prime Minister Keir Starmer's grip on the Labour Party looking weak, the CBI also expressed dismay at the prospect of a leadership challenge.

"Business ​cannot afford a summer ‌of stagnation while the politics play out. There is a real, material ​cost to what's happening in Westminster now," Newton-Smith said.

($1 = 0.7444 ​pounds)

(Reporting by David MillikenEditing by Gareth Jones)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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