Methodology note
Replace non-dom tax status: note
Models replace non-dom tax status in 2028-29. The estimate is illustrative and excludes wider package interactions.
Central fiscal result
-£2.5bn - Net fiscal impact in 2028-29
Low case: -£4.5bn. High case: +£0.5bn. Positive numbers are fiscal costs or borrowing pressure. Negative numbers are Exchequer savings or receipts.
Scenario and baseline
- Models replace non-dom tax status by 2028-29.
- Baseline is current policy or published departmental plans.
- Central case uses published party or official anchors where available.
- Wider manifesto interactions are excluded unless stated.
Affected population
- Affected units are people, firms, households or providers depending on policy.
- Direct exposure follows the manifesto or government target group.
- Indirect exposure includes suppliers, workers, consumers and taxpayers.
- Weakest counts are widened in the low and high cases.
Gross impact
- Published anchor or scenario central is +£2.5bn in 2028-29.
- Gross costs or receipts are adjusted for behaviour and delivery risk.
- Tax, benefit or procurement offsets are separated in the fiscal build-up.
- The range is deliberately wider where implementation detail is thin.
Fiscal build-up, central case
- Gross tax or receipt yield: -£3.1bn
- Behavioural and avoidance response: +£0.5bn
- Administration and compliance cost: +£0.1bn
- Other tax-base interactions: +£0.0bn
Central net impact: -£2.5bn in 2028-29.
Behaviour and pass-through
- Low case assumes stronger delivery or receipts than central.
- Central case applies moderate behavioural leakage and pass-through.
- High case allows weaker delivery, larger take-up or higher costs.
- Output effects follow incidence, capacity and investment channels.
- Distributional gains do not automatically imply GDP gains.
Phasing
- 2026-27: -£0.2bn. Phased implementation and take-up.
- 2027-28: -£1.4bn. Phased implementation and take-up.
- 2028-29: -£2.5bn. Phased implementation and take-up.
- 2029-30: -£2.5bn. Phased implementation and take-up.
Main source groups
- HM Treasury, "Autumn Budget 2024 policy costings" (2024): Official policy costings show tax and spending impacts, including behavioural assumptions where published; used for implemented Labour tax measures.
- Kleven, Landais and Saez, "Taxation and International Migration of Superstars" (American Economic Review, 2013): Highly mobile top earners can respond strongly to tax differentials; relevant to wealth and high-income taxes.
- Office for Budget Responsibility, "Economic and fiscal outlook October 2024" (2024): The OBR assessed employer NICs, public investment and Budget-wide output and inflation effects; supports economic-impact and tax-incidence assumptions.
- Saez, Slemrod and Giertz, "The Elasticity of Taxable Income with Respect to Marginal Tax Rates" (Journal of Economic Literature, 2012): Higher marginal rates can raise revenue but behavioural responses and avoidance become important at the top; supports wide ranges for high-income and capital-tax measures.
- Labour Party, "Change: Labour Party Manifesto 2024" (2024): The manifesto sets the policy pledge, funding claim or target being modelled; used as the policy definition and manifesto baseline.