Scrap plan for new banking tax, London financiers tells UK opposition party

Reuters  |  LONDON 

(Reuters) - A proposed by Britain's opposition Party would risk the competitiveness of London's centre, the City of Corporation said on Sunday, calling for the proposal to be scrapped.

The leftist Party, which is holding its annual conference in southern English town of Brighton, has advocated a so-called 'Robin Hood' to levy charges on bond and derivative trades. It says the could raise 4.7 billion pounds ($6.34 billion) to fund higher public spending.

But the City of Corporation, the body which administers policy in the central district, criticised the policy.

"A transactions tax, however described, would be a unilateral policy which would weaken our hand and undermine our competitiveness," said the corporation's Policy Chairman, Catherine McGuinness.

lost a general election in 2017, and one is not scheduled until 2022, but is on Prime Minister Theresa May's government falling sooner and has briefed institutions on its plan in recent months.

On the first main day of his party's conference, leader Jeremy Corbyn was asked about his approach to taxation said: "I don't think I'm worried about taxing the super rich and the super wealthy."

"The objective surely has to be stronger economic base for everybody in this country and dealing with the waste of poverty and inequality," he told the BBC.

($1 = 0.7412 pounds)

(Reporting by William James; Editing by Toby Chopra)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, September 24 2017. 17:41 IST