The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) has urged the UK government to reconsider its approach to taxing businesses and its rhetoric regarding price-gouging. CBI Chief Executive Rain Newton-Smith stated that business is not a 'cash tap' and that growth cannot be achieved through taxation alone. She highlighted that business contributed 31% of UK tax revenues in the past year, the highest proportion since comparable records began in 1998. Newton-Smith also criticized the finance minister, Rachel Reeves, for sharply increasing employers' social security contributions, which cost £27 billion ($36 billion) last year, an amount equivalent to employing 1.3 million young people on the minimum wage. The CBI refuted the narrative of profiteering and price-gouging, asserting that many firms are struggling to stay afloat, especially in the context of a cost-of-living shock potentially triggered by the Iran war. Furthermore, the CBI expressed concern over political instability in Westminster, warning that 'business cannot afford a summer of stagnation while the politics play out' due to the material cost of political maneuvering.