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Reverse Conservative Bank Tax Cuts and Impose Windfall Tax on Energy Companies

Liberal Democrat · what the evidence says

An independent, source-checked look at Liberal Democrat’s policy “Reverse Conservative Bank Tax Cuts and Impose Windfall Tax on Energy Companies” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.

Public finances & the next generation — Helps

moderate · moderate confidence

Reversing bank tax cuts and tightening the energy windfall tax would raise meaningful additional revenue, reducing the gap between spending and receipts. The main caveat is that the bank measures are modelled by an advocacy source and the energy windfall tax is one-off, so long-run sustainability gains are limited.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether the bank surcharge/levy restoration raises revenues at the level projected (a TUC/advocacy estimate) and whether the windfall tax is genuinely one-off or becomes a repeated, investment-distorting fixture.

Our reading: Both components of this policy are explicitly revenue-raising measures targeting sectors where revenues have fallen from prior levels. On the banking side, the Bank Levy was progressively cut from 2016 and the Bank Surcharge was halved to 3% in 2023, creating a clear gap between current receipts and the stated 2016 baseline. The TUC (an advocacy source — flagged) projects £15 billion over four years from restoration, using OBR forecast inputs; there is no independent institutional estimate in the provided evidence, which constrains confidence. Nonetheless, the direction of effect on the fiscal position is clear: restoring a tax that was cut raises receipts relative to the counterfactual, directly improving the funded-vs-borrowed ratio. On the energy side, the EPL's investment allowance — allowing deduction of up to 91% of capital costs — substantially erodes the effective rate. Tightening this, as the policy implies via a 'proper' windfall tax, would improve near-term revenue. The NEF (advocacy) projects near-doubling of receipts from loophole closure; this should be taken as indicative rather than authoritative, but the mechanism (removing a large allowance raises effective rates) is straightforward. The key fiscal-sustainability caveat is the IFS observation that one-off windfall taxes only improve the debt path if credibly one-off — repeated extensions convert them into a permanent uncertain levy that depresses investment and erodes the future tax base, potentially worsening long-run sustainability. The EPL has already been extended multiple times, lending weight to this concern. Overall, near-term revenue is materially improved by both measures; long-term effects are more ambiguous because of investment uncertainty and the one-off framing. The net verdict is 'improves/moderate' over this parliament, with moderate confidence given the reliance on advocacy-source magnitude estimates and genuine uncertainty about long-run investment effects.

Prosperity & living standards — Mixed picture

minor · low confidence

Taxing bank and energy company super-profits raises public revenue but creates investment-policy uncertainty that could deter capital spending in both sectors; whether living standards benefit depends on how the revenue is used and whether investment actually falls. The evidence on both sides is real but contested.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether investment in North Sea energy and bank lending actually falls materially in response, and whether any resulting revenue funds productivity-enhancing public investment or merely consumption spending.

Our reading: This policy touches O13 through two channels: revenue raised from banks and energy firms, and the effect on business investment and economic dynamism in those sectors. On the revenue side, the TUC projects up to £15 billion over four years from the bank tax restoration. This could in principle support public investment or reduce borrowing, both of which bear on long-run living standards — but the policy does not specify how it would be spent, so we cannot treat the revenue as an O13 gain without a further spending link that is outside this policy's scope. On investment and dynamism, the evidence points to a real concern. The IFS flags that a windfall tax's efficiency depends on its credibility as one-off — credibility already eroded by the EPL's multiple extensions. Industry bodies warn of investment deterrence in North Sea energy. These effects on capital spending, energy output, and potentially bank lending are genuine O13 risks, as reduced investment feeds through to productivity and opportunity over time. Countervailing this, BP's stated position suggests the deterrence is not universal, and the energy windfall is described as one-off, which limits the long-run signal to investors somewhat. The net picture is genuinely mixed: real revenue is raised (positive for fiscal space and living standards if well spent), but investment uncertainty — especially in energy — is backed by credible institutional concern, and the stated one-off nature is undermined by precedent. Neither effect clearly dominates at the population scale with the evidence provided, and confidence is low because the investment response and spending application are both unresolved. Magnitude is minor because the effects on aggregate living standards are indirect and the counterfactual investment trajectory is contested.

Inequality & fair shares — Helps

moderate · moderate confidence

By raising taxes on large bank profits and energy company super-profits — both of which flow disproportionately to wealthy shareholders — this policy shifts the tax burden toward the top of the income and wealth distribution, narrowing the gap. The main caveat is that the policy text does not specify how the revenue is spent, and the magnitude depends on whether projected revenues materialise.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether the projected revenues (up to £15bn over four years from bank taxes alone) actually materialise, and how the proceeds are deployed — redistribution to lower incomes would amplify the narrowing effect, while deficit reduction would do so less directly.

Our reading: Both elements of this policy target concentrated corporate profits. Bank profits and energy company profits flow predominantly to shareholders, who are disproportionately at the top of the wealth and income distribution. Reversing cuts to the Bank Surcharge and Bank Levy that reduced rates substantially since 2016, and imposing a windfall tax on oil and gas super-profits, therefore shifts the tax burden upward — directly narrowing the gap between top and bottom. The bank tax reversal is estimated (by TUC, citing OBR data) to raise up to £15bn over four years. The windfall tax evidence shows the existing EPL already generates substantial revenue and that its removal would primarily benefit shareholders rather than consumers — confirming that the incidence of such taxes falls at the top of the distribution. Absent the policy, these profits continue to accrue largely to shareholders with minimal additional taxation; the policy's counterfactual is therefore a continuation of the post-2016/2023 lower-rate regime that benefited large financial and energy corporations. Two caveats temper the magnitude. First, the policy text does not specify how revenues are deployed; the narrowing effect is strongest if proceeds fund services or transfers that benefit lower-income households, and weaker if used solely for deficit reduction. Second, both TUC revenue estimates (advocacy source) and Greenpeace figures (advocacy source) should be weighted cautiously; OBR-backed figures for the existing EPL confirm the revenue order of magnitude is plausible but contested. The IFS flags uncertainty about investment distortion from windfall taxes, which could reduce long-run revenues and thus dilute the redistributive effect. On balance, the evidence supports a moderate improvement in O14: taxes on wealthy shareholders rise, the gap narrows directionally, and the projected revenues are large enough to be material at population scale — but confidence is moderate given revenue uncertainty and the absence of a specified spending plan.

Cost of living — Little effect

minor · low confidence

Taxing bank profits and energy company windfalls raises public revenue, but evidence shows this does not directly reduce energy bills or food costs for ordinary households — the benefit depends entirely on how the money is spent. Since the policy says nothing about how revenues will be used, the direct cost-of-living effect is unclear at best.

The evidence

Biggest unknown: Whether and how the raised revenues would be directed toward measures that reduce costs for ordinary households — without that link, the policy has no direct cost-of-living effect.

Our reading: This policy operates as a revenue-raising measure, not a direct cost-of-living intervention. On the bank taxation side, restoring the Bank Surcharge and Bank Levy to 2016 real-terms levels could raise significant public revenue (projected at £15bn over four years by the TUC), but bank taxes do not directly affect consumer energy bills, food prices, or household disposable income. Any benefit to households would depend on how those revenues are deployed — and the policy is silent on that. On the windfall tax side, the evidence is clear that taxing North Sea oil and gas profits does not lower consumer energy prices: experts agree the benefit of removing such taxes flows to company profits, not bills. The inverse is also true — a windfall tax does not mechanically reduce household energy costs. There is a risk that tighter taxation deters North Sea investment, but industry investment decisions are some steps removed from the immediate cost-of-living basket. The IFS caution about tax credibility and investment uncertainty is relevant for long-run energy supply but does not translate to a near-term household cost effect. In sum, the policy raises revenue but contains no stated mechanism for translating that revenue into lower bills, higher benefits, or greater disposable income for ordinary households. The direction is therefore negligible on this fundamental as stated, with a minor upside possible only if revenues are hypothecated to household relief — which is not claimed.