British Property Federation warns against hitting foreign investors with new taxes

Hitting foreign property investors with new taxes will damage the UK’s status as a country that is open for business while doing little to curb rising house prices, it is claimed.

There are concerns that UK chancellor George Osborne is considering levying capital gains tax (CGT) on foreign investors to tackle rising house prices in London and the South East.

According to the British Property Federation (BPF) the central reason behind the high cost of homes was the lack of supply, not foreign buyers, and it has warned that penalising people who want to invest in the UK would see fewer homes built, not more.

It added that the political risk created by the proposal would create uncertainty among people considering investing in a range of assets, including commercial property, and not just in the residential sector.

‘House prices are rising due to a chronic shortage of new homes, not because of foreign investors, and until this supply issue is dealt with it makes no sense to slap kneejerk taxes on people who want to spend money in the UK and contribute to the UK economy,’ said Liz Peace, chief executive of the BPF.

‘Uncertainty of this kind is hugely damaging to Britain’s image as a country that is open for business and far outweighs the paltry sums which this tax would raise. Indeed it is only with foreign investment that many London schemes are able to go ahead,’ she pointed out.

‘We know from bitter experience that some foreign investors will have seen these headlines and will already be thinking twice about whether or not to invest in the UK,’ she added.

A study published this month by the London School of Economics found that while international investors have enabled a large proportion of development in London, foreign buyers accounted for just 6.5% of sales by value across the capital as a whole. These homes are also predominately high value homes, meaning the number sold to overseas investors would be even less.

Research from Knight Frank suggests that over the last two years 49% of all £1 million plus sales in prime central London went to foreign buyers by nationality, but only 28% of buyers were non resident in the UK.