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Wednesday 30 July 2025 12:31 pm  |  Updated:  Wednesday 30 July 2025 3:10 pm

HSBC boss: Rachel Reeves hiking bank tax would dent growth

By: Samuel Norman

Senior City Reporter

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The boss of HSBC has renewed calls to avoid a bank tax hike. (Image PA)
The boss of HSBC has renewed calls to avoid a bank tax hike. (Image PA)

The boss of FTSE 100 juggernaut HSBC has become the latest banking voice to warn Rachel Reeves against raising taxes on banks over fears it would harm economic growth.

Georges Elhedery, HSBC’s chief executive, said on Wednesday any further financial pressures on lenders could spark trouble for the UK economy.

“Additional taxation on banks runs the risk of eroding our continued investment capacity in the business and in supporting our customers, and ultimately in delivering growth for the UK,” Elhedery argued.

This follows calls from his fellow ‘Big Four’ banking chiefs that a levy on banks would not align with the Chancellor’s growth agenda.

Paul Thwaite, NatWest’s chief executive, said “strong economies need strong banks” as he argued he would rather use the bank’s capital for loans to boost growth “for the good of the country”.

Meanwhile, Lloyds’ chief Charlie Nunn declared increasing taxes on lenders “wouldn’t be consistent” with helping boost the economy.

Weak fiscal position raises tax fears

The possibility of a tax hike on banks was heightened after a leaked memo revealed Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner recommending a series of revenue-raising measures to Reeves.

Read more

HSBC targets $100m in savings with Google Cloud AI tie-up

Picture of HSBC building outside.

One of which included raising the surcharge on banks, which sits on top of the corporation tax, to five per cent – effectively setting the banks rate at 30 per cent.

The comments from banking bosses follow first-half earnings season for UK lenders.

Ahead of reports, Bank of America analysts warned the “worsening fiscal position in the UK” would raise questions “around the possibility of bank taxes”. 

Banks are already subject to an outsized rate in the UK when compared to their overseas counterparts.

The sector’s total rate in 2024 sat at 45.8 per cent, dwarfing European rivals Amsterdam (42 per cent), Frankfurt (38.6 per cent) and Dublin (28.8 per cent), according to a report UK Finance submitted ahead of the 2024 Autumn Budget.

But the slimming fiscal headroom of Rachel Reeves has led to elevated concerns she will turn to the banking sector for an easy tax raid.

Economists estimate the Chancellor may face a £20bn shortfall in the Autumn after a series of government U-turns across welfare and winter fuel allowances and costly £190bn Spending Review.

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‘Why single out banks?’: Santander chief hits out at UK tax regime

Ana Botín, CEO of Santander, speaking at a business conference, addressing financial strategies and global market trends.

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