02/24/2010 (4:33 am)

Brown to Pledge U.K. Tax System Attractive to Multinationals

Filed under: legal |

Prime Minister Gordon Brown will pledge today to make Britain’s tax system attractive to large multinational companies in an effort to secure the backing of business leaders before this year’s election.

Brown’s government will propose a set of principles that include promises to ensure new taxes aren’t too complex and a commitment to hold consultations before introducing new corporate taxes. The plan will be published by Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling at a conference in London.

“By maintaining a world-class environment for business to do business we can attract the investment that will underpin our move from recession to recovery to growth,” Brown said in his weekly podcast yesterday.

Brown’s Labour Party and David Cameron’s Conservatives are competing to win credibility with business leaders before the election, which Labour Party documents suggest will be held on May 6. So far, the campaign has centered on which party has the best recipe for tackling Britain’s record peacetime budget deficit.

Darling began talks with company leaders in April 2008, establishing a panel of more than 10 executives from international companies who meet regularly with Treasury ministers and civil servants.

Brown, Darling and Business Secretary Peter Mandelson will be joined at the London conference by executives from companies including Bombardier Inc., China Merchants Bank Co. Ltd., Burberry Plc and Lockheed Martin Inc.

Bank Stakes

The Conservatives pledged yesterday to sell U.K. government stakes in Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc to voters as their support continued to slip in opinion polls.

The plan to sell shares at a discounted price, outlined by Conservative Treasury spokesman George Osborne, came as opinion polls show the party’s lead slipping after it called for spending cuts to start this year to reduce the deficit and the economy exited recession in the fourth quarter of 2009.

A poll by YouGov Plc in the Sunday Times newspaper showed the Conservative lead over Labour at its narrowest since December 2008.

YouGov said the Conservatives had the backing of 39 percent of those surveyed, down one percentage point from a month ago, while Labour were backed by 33 percent, up two points. Details of when the poll was taken and the margin of error weren’t given.

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