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Bank tax surcharge ‘set to be slashed in Budget’

Mr Sunak is expected to announce a cut to the surcharge from 8% to 3% from April 2023

Rishi Sunak makes his speech to the Conservative Conference, Manchester

Chancellor Rishi Sunak is reportedly planning to more than halve the tax surcharge on bank profits in next week’s Budget to help boost London’s competitiveness as a global financial centre.

Mr Sunak will announce a cut to the surcharge from 8% to 3% from April 2023 in his October 27 Budget, according to the Financial Times

It comes ahead of a hike in corporation tax from 19% to 25% in 2023, which Mr Sunak had cautioned risks making “the taxation of banks uncompetitive”.

Banks currently pay 27% tax on profits, of which 19% is corporation tax and 8% the bank surcharge.

They would see their overall corporation tax charge surge to 33% in 2023, if the surcharge was not reduced.

But the expected reduction in the top-up tax would instead see their overall charge edge up to 28%.

It follows comments by City minister John Glen last month flagging that the surcharge could be cut as he vowed that Britain’s financial services sector would enjoy “competitive tax rates”.

Mr Glen also said at the time he would keep under review the bankers’ bonus cap as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ looks to bolster the competitiveness of the City in the wake of Brexit, which has seen jobs and bank offices shift to rivals such as Frankfurt, Paris and New York.