Rachel Reeves has been accused of a “Davos deal for millionaires” after announcing she was watering down moves to make wealthy foreigners pay more tax. The chancellor said she had been “listening to the concerns” of “non-doms” living in the UK.
That left Rachel Reeves, Britain’s chancellor, with an uphill task when she arrived at the Swiss alpine town to court investors at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum. She met a raft of Wall Street bosses,
The Conservatives says the Chancellor is ‘deeply out of her depth' and says she must immediately return to Britain.
British finance minister Rachel Reeves plans to introduce new budget measures in March if needed to adhere to fiscal rules, emphasizing caution before the OBR's forecast. Economic data may push for further actions following tax increases and increased borrowing,
For a Labour chancellor it was a bold move: Rachel Reeves went to Davos and told an audience of global plutocrats that she wanted to make their lives easier by creating a riskier regulatory environment for UK consumers.
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves joked about Elon Musk’s online “trolling” of world leaders, in a break from the UK government’s careful efforts to avoid responding to frequent criticism from the close Trump ally.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves inherited a bad economic hand from the Tories - but in her darkest moments, she has seen a string of fortunate breaks allowing her breathing space
Reeves to water down tax raid on non-doms amid exodus of millionaires - The chancellor is to amend some of the changes to tax rules for non-domiciled individuals announced in October’s Budget
British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves will promote the UK as a prime investment location at the World Economic Forum in Davos. Highlighting political and economic stability, she aims to persuade global business leaders,
UK chancellor Rachel Reeves will bid for more investment in Britain as she travels to the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos this week. Reeves is expected to meet the heads of major international banks during her two-day Swiss visit to promote Britain's fiscal credentials for the future.
Davos offers Rachel Reeves an opportunity to make the case publicly and privately for her economic growth plans, with the hope of securing some investment commitments.