My final “tax land” of 2012

My final “tax land” of 2012 as I have a looming chapter deadline on the subject of a Scottish tax system.

Where to start?  Let’s start with the UK Chancellor’s “Autumn” statement.

George Osborne admitted that the UK had missed its debt reduction targets putting the UK’s AAA credit rating under threat.  Osborne also announced that the planned rise on fuel duty is to be axed and the personal allowance of income tax payers is to be boosted.  Benefits are to be limited to a 1% rise a year for the next 3 years and economic growth will be lower than predicted until at least 2018.

In response the Institute of Fiscal Studies warned that one million people will find themselves joining the higher 40p income tax rate by 2015.  Far higher than the 400,000 figure quoted by Osborne.  The IFS also said further austerity measures to increase taxes and cut benefits were unavoidable to fix a £27bn black-hole in the UK economy before the next UK General Election.

Figures also showed that poorest 30% of households will suffer the most under the changes announced.  More on this from the Scotsman can be found here.

The AAA rating is of course an issue in the independence referendum.  One of the arguments made by those arguing NO is that an independent Scotland, notwithstanding its oil reserves, would lose its AAA credit rating.  This issue is now a problem for the NO campaign as the UK, in the event of a YES vote, would presumably be desperate to retain Scotland in a monetary union to protect its credit rating.

The YES campaign also received a further boost when it was confirmed that nearly 17 billion barrels of oil are to be recovered from the North Sea over the next 30 years following a £134bn investment by oil and gas companies.  The majority of the new developments will be in Scottish waters while production from gas fields in the southern North Sea begins a dramatic decline. More on this from the Scotsman can be found here.

Now to the tax avoidance debate.

The House of Commons Public Accounts Committee has warned officials from HMRC that firms that devise complicated tax regimes are “running rings” around them. The Committee Chair, Margaret Hodge MP, said that the public would consider such schemes “completely and utterly immoral”. More on this from the Guardian can be found here.  My recent blog on this and the lack of political will to reform the UK’s tax system can be found here.

Meanwhile the Chief Secretary to the UK Treasury, Danny Alexander, has warned against naming and shaming large firms who do not pay the correct amount of tax, insisting that he is obliged to defend firms’ “taxpayer confidentiality”. More on this from the Mirror can be found here.  This adds to the growing evidence that the UK Government is at best being half-hearted in its attempts to tackle this issue.

Further evidence for this claim can be found when you consider that only 5% of the UK Government’s announced investment into HMRC will be aimed at tackling tax avoidance.  The context to this is of course the large budget reduction and cut in staff numbers already made to HMRC.  More on this from the Times can be found here.

According to an investigation by the Times, offshore companies are exploiting a tax loophole which allows them to buy up some of the UK’s most expensive homes and avoid paying property stamp duty, inheritance tax and capital gains tax.  More on this from the Times can be found here.  The Times has done some excellent work on this issue over the last few months.

Figures from HMRC show that the number of people declaring an annual income of more than £1m fell from 16,000 to 6,000 after the previous 50p top rate was brought in.  More on this from the Telegraph can be found here.  What this statistic purports to show is though open to debate.

Final point on the tax avoidance and tax evasion debate.  The claim that I have made on many occasions that tax for some, namely large companies and the wealthy, is becoming a matter of negotiation – almost voluntary in nature – seems now to be generally accepted.  That is clearly what Starbucks think.

The Scottish Government has unveiled plans to reform stamp duty land tax in Scotland.  The importance of this should not be underestimated.  The Scottish Government must show that it has the competence to deal with tax matters.  The signs so far are positive.  More on this can be found here.

Now to matters slight further afield.

France’s Senate has rejected the Government’s 2013 Budget, which among other measures raised the marginal tax rate on annual income of over €150,000 to 45%, imposed a 75% “solidarity contribution” on income over €1m, and raised capital gains tax rates to match income tax rates.  The Budget will though almost certainly be forced through by the National Assembly.  More on this from Tax-news can be found here.

The Republic of Ireland Government has revealed its 2013 Budget.  It introduces a new annual property tax of 0.18% on properties valued below €1m, payable by owners.  More expensive properties will be taxed at €1,800 plus 0.25% of their value over €1m.  Initially, and until 2016, owners’ valuations will be accepted.  More on this from the Irish Times can be found here.

Finally to the USA.  The US Internal Revenue Service has published guidance on calculating the new 3.8% tax on investment income, imposed to pay for President Obama’s universal health insurance plan.  More on this from the Journal of Accountancy can be found here.

This has been a very interesting year for all those interested in tax and the wider Scottish tax and fiscal powers debate. I suspect that is not going to change in 2013.  Best wishes to you and yours for 2013.

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Is there the political will to reform the UK’s tax system?

A lot has been written in the past dew weeks about the attitude of a number of international companies to paying UK corporation tax.  This issue is though only one of a number of matters that needs to be addressed.

Is there the political will to reform the UK’s tax system?  I would argue no.  What evidence do I have for this?

1. The reluctance of the UK Government to address the paying of corporation tax by large international companies.

2. There is a lot of talk of tax simplification but the reality is very different.  The new reduced rate of inheritance tax is but one example.

3. If the UK Government was serious about reforming the tax system we would be at least be debating publishing summaries of business tax returns and other ideas to increase transparency.

4. The introduction of morality into this debate does not help matters.  A robust tax system should not need to rely on what is and what is not “moral”.

5.  Fairness is though crucial.  The perception is growing that tax for certain sections of our society is optional.  This needs to be addressed as a matter of urgency.   The fact that it is increasingly difficult to tell what is “tax avoidance” and what is “tax evasion” does not help matters.

6.  The fact that the UK Government has allowed so many public sector people to be employed through service companies is nothing short of disgraceful.   This added to the perception of a lack of fairness.

7. The UK Government seemed to immediately say it would not introduce a Financial Transaction Tax because it was a European proposal.  The lack of a proper debate again added to the perception of a lack of fairness.

8. If the UK Government did care about the quality of UK’s tax system why have they made such deep cuts to HMRC’s budget and staff numbers.

This though is not just a UK Government matter.

It was reported a couple of months ago that a number of so-called celebrities were involved in schemes, perfectly legal, to reduce the amount of tax they paid.   The furore, if that is what it was, did not last long.  If the public do not seem to care too much about this issue then the UK Government might conclude it is not that important.

These issues apply just as much to the Scottish Government as further tax and fiscal powers reside in Edinburgh.

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Another few weeks in “tax land”

Where to start.

In a speech to mark her first year as Scottish Conservative leader, Ruth Davidson outlined an aspiration to cut income tax by more than 1p when new powers come to Holyrood.  More on this from the Scotsman can be found here.  Now compare this with a survey that claims that three quarters of Scots think taxes should be raised for those with the highest incomes and wealth. More on the survey from the Herald can be found here.  These stories show how Scotland, both the politicians and the general public, are beginning to wake up to the fact that tax is not necessarily just a UK matter.

The Scottish Government has backed the latest call for control over air passenger duty to be passed to the Scottish Parliament.  This is a matter worth remembering when you hear comments from the NO campaign on how they “hope” to give the Scottish Parliament further powers.  Let’s not forget how few tax powers are included in the latest Scotland Act.  It is “Calman minus” just as the Liberals recent Home Rule Commission is “Steel minus”.  More on this can be found here.

First it was Rangers now it is Hearts that is in trouble with HMRC.  The surprise is no-one is surprised.  Hearts owe HMRC approximately £500,000 in unpaid tax.  More on this from the Scotsman can be found here.

The UK Government seems to be doing a fair bit of thinking just now which is always worrying.

The UK’s Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, has called for a change in international tax standards to reflect changes in business, such as the rise of e-commerce, which makes it easier for companies to shift taxation away from jurisdictions where profit is being generated.  More on this from the Guardian can be found here.  In addition, Danny Alexander, the Chief Secretary to the UK Treasury, has pledged to crack down on corporate tax avoidance following revelations that the supermarket chain Asda may have used overseas transfers to its parent company Walmart to avoid up to £250m in tax.  More on this from the Times can be found here.  Lots of words but can we expect real action?

The Chief Executive of HMRC, Lin Homer, has been put under pressure by the UK Treasury Select Committee to explain why multinationals have been allowed to pay less tax than small businesses in the UK.  The Comptroller and Auditor-General of the National Audit Office, Amyas Morse, said that large companies often put pressure on HMRC by threatening to pull out of the country altogether.  More on this from the Times can be found here.  A connected story from the Daily Mail and involving Margaret Hodge, chairman of the UK Public Accounts Committee, can be found here.

Under “road charging” proposals being considered by the UK Government, motorists could face a new two-tier system in which drivers would pay a lower rate of tax if they do not use the UK’s trunk road network.  Have any of the UK media outlets considered the fact that this is also a matter for the Scottish Parliament?  Of course not.  The new system would comprise a basic charge for the use of local roads, and a secondary charge for those motorists wanting to use motorways and A-roads.  More on this from the Guardian can be found here.

Is it just me or is it really the case than almost every change in the law is met with the accusation that it breaches some part of EU law?  The latest example is the UK Government’s planned changes to child benefits.  The UK Treasury has dismissed the claims by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales.  More on this from the Telegraph can be found here.

David Gauke, Exchequer Minister to the UK Treasury, has argued that HMRC needs to pay more to recruit the best tax experts in order to combat tax avoidance by major multinational companies.  Edward Troup, Director-General for Tax and Welfare at HMRC, welcomed the proposal, saying: “I think it’s on the record now to have more staff and higher pay”.  More on this from the Times can be found here.  This is an issue that we in Scotland will also have to respond to when setting up our own tax system.

It is often claimed that that the UK Government favours London and the south-east of England. This is another such claim.  The UK Communities Secretary, Eric Pickles, has faced criticism from property groups and retailers after his announcement that a revaluation of business rates has been pushed back to 2017.  The British Property Federation said that it was unfair to expect tenants to continue to pay a levy based on “top-of-the-market” 2008 rents. The UK Government argues however that a revaluation would lead to rate increases for many businesses, especially in the south-east.  More on this from Accountancy Age can be found here.

Now to a story that keeps bubbling up to the surface and clearly is not going away.  First it involved government officials such as the head of the Student Loans Company, then it was the BBC now it is teachers.  HMRC has said that supply teachers hired via recruitment agencies using off-shore firms are causing a shortfall in National Insurance contributions.  An HMRC spokesman said: “These kinds of arrangements are not compliant with tax and National Insurance legislation and the end client, or the employment businesses, may be liable for any underpaid tax and National Insurance”.  More on this from the BBC news website can be found here.

Anyone who regularly looks at HMRC press releases will see HMRC increasingly publicising stories such as this.  An Isle of Wight tax advisor who stole £52,000 by claiming tax repayments using his clients’ names was jailed today at Newport Crown Court.  The press release from HMRC can be found here.

Let’s end with matters slightly further afield.  Hong Kong has imposed a 15% emergency tax on foreign buyers of residential property in an attempt to hold back the island’s property bubble. Stamp duty for short-term speculators has also gone up from 15 to 20%.  Similar measures have been imposed by the Singaporean Government.  More on this from the excellent STEP Journal can be found here.

One last point.  Patriotism takes many forms and that includes paying your taxes.

Have a good week.

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An interesting few weeks in “tax land”

Let’s start with the independence debate.  I would normally refer to this as the “fiscal powers” debate but there seems little point as that ship appears to have sailed.  Some things are becoming clearer.  There is not going to be a second question.  The likelihood of serious additional fiscal powers being devolved to the Scottish Parliament if Scotland votes ‘No’ also now seems increasingly unlikely.

It is not difficult to imagine the appetite for even listening to arguments for additional fiscal powers at Westminster in that event.  That is where the Devo Plus campaign has got it wrong.  And I say this as one of the authors of the Reform Scotland Fiscal Powers papers on which their proposal is based.  Devo Plus are arguing for a ‘No’ vote and also that there should not be a second question.  Do they really think Westminster will seriously consider devolving further powers to the Scottish Parliament if Scotland votes ‘No’?  An article by Jeremy Purvis who leads the Devo Plus campaign can be found here.  On a personal note it is disappointing to see that Reform Scotland have now taken a stance on Scotland’s constitutional question by its support for Devo Plus.

The fact that only the Liberal Democrats are going to have a further devolution proposal by the time the referendum takes place reinforces this argument.

So if there is not to be a second question, what do those who have supported devo max previously do?  The impact and importance of Jim McColl’s announcement in favour of independence should not be under estimated.  A BBC news website report on this can be found here.

Now to taxing the wealthy.  Just now politicians seem to talk of little else.  Let’s ignore for now what actually constitutes wealth.

Let’s start with an article by George Kerevan on the Scotsman.  Kerevan argues against taxing the wealthy, believing that it is arbitrary, complicated to administer, and does not raise enough money relative to the trouble it takes to collect it.   His article can be found here.

Nick Clegg wants to ensure that the rich “pay their fair share”.  He has vowed to block further welfare cuts until a mansion tax is agreed with his Tory coalition partners. Vince Cable has also spoken out against tax havens and non-domiciles.  Then there is Danny Alexander.  He has promised tax investigations for all those who own assets worth more than £1 million.  The cynic in me says: I have heard a lot of this before and not just on tax reform.  What about the banks.  Has anything of substance actually been done?

Then there is the evolving love in between Ed Balls and Nick Clegg.  Ed Balls told the Independent newspaper that a future Labour UK Government could impose an annual levy on expensive properties, unlike Nick Clegg though, he favours a permanent rather than temporary wealth tax.  The article in the Independent can be found here.  This does seem more like mischief making than serious policy making given how long the last UK Labour Government were in power.

One reason for my cynicism is a claim made by the SNP this week.  The claim is that there are fewer, not more, tax inspectors.  I have blogged before on how HMRC’s budget has been reduced and of the large number of HMRC redundancies.  If we are serious about tackling tax evasion then you need a properly resourced tax collection agency.  Transparency would not go a miss either.  How about publishing tax returns?  The SNP press release on this can be found here.

So what can be done?  HMRC’s High Net Worth Unit has brought in £500 million in extra tax from the UK’s 5,000 wealthiest people since it launched three years ago. The amount collected is well over the original target of £100 million a year.  A press release from HMRC on this can be found here.  And of course this was achieved in a time where HMRC’s budget has been cut.

Finally on this issue, an excellent article by Iain MacWhirter in the Herald.  MacWhirter points to the relative insignificance of the cost of the so called “free services” as compared with the salaries and pensions of the higher-earning public sector workers.  The article in the Herald can be found here.

These services are of course not “free”.  They are paid for by taxation.  Taxation is simply a series of political choices.

The introduction of a 15% rate of stamp duty land tax on corporate buyers in this year’s UK Budget, it is claimed, has had a dramatic impact on the high-value London property market.  The article from the online STEP journal can be found here here.  I must admit to struggling to see why this is a bad thing.

About 60% of all taxpayers’ complaints against HMRC are upheld on appeal, according to figures from Pinsent Masons. Some 58,110 complaints were made last year, of which more than 33,000 were accepted either by an internal HMRC review or by the Adjudicator’s Office.  A report on this can be found here.

Barclays Bank is to cut back on its UK tax planning unit, after a dispute with the tax authorities over ‘aggressive’ schemes tarnished its public image.  A report on this can be found here.

Now to matters slightly further afield.

Firstly to America and the never ending saga of Mitt Romney’s tax affairs.  Romney has at last published his 2011 tax return.  It turns out Romney and his wife paid $1.936 million in taxes on gross income of $13.7 million.  That is a tax rate of 14.1%.  The article from the online STEP journal can be found here.  I suspect that this is not the end of this matter.

Francois Hollande has revealed details of his 75% top rate of income tax for France’s wealthiest citizens.  Newspaper reports suggest there are likely to be concessions for married couples, performers and sports stars.  Meanwhile the richest man in France, Bernard Arnault, has applied for Belgian nationality to escape the tax.  An article on this from the Guardian can be found here.  Again, I suspect that this is an issue that is going to run and run.

A Spanish newspaper has reported that the country is about to double capital gains tax on short term gains to 52%.  This gives a sense of the level of problems now faced by Spain.  An article on this can be found here.

Have a good weekend.

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A developing scandal in “tax land”

Two tax stories have dominated the news this week.

Let’s start with a developing tax scandal.   This is an unusual tax scandal as it seems that the UK Government has gone out of its way to help a small number of highly paid people, people working for the UK Government, to pay less tax.  I shall try and ignore the urge to say it was ever thus.

Last week I wrote about how the Chief Executive of the Student Loan Company has his salary of £182,000 paid via a company and without tax being deducted.  This arrangement allowed Ed Lester to pay corporation tax of 21% rather than up to 50% income tax on his earnings.   It also transpired that officials from both HMRC and HM Treasury were aware, and even formally approved, the arrangement.

The Guardian reported today that the same tax arrangement has been approved for 25 of the most senior staff at the UK Department of Health.  The Guardian’s article can be found here.    As the Guardian says in its article in relation to last week’s Student Loans Company revelation:  “At the time it was presented as a rare practice.”  Surprisingly, note the sarcasm, it was not.  Great work by the Guardian again.

Does this matter?  Yes it does.  Am I surprised that the present and past UK Governments thought this was acceptable? No.  Is this a one-off example of Government hypocrisy.  No.  The UK Government regularly lectures all and sundry on tax avoidance and evasion.  Earlier blogs have commented on HMRC’s dealings with Goldman Sachs and Vodafone.  A few years ago it was discovered that HMRC transferred ownership of its own property portfolio offshore to save tax.  Now it transpires HMRC and HM Treasury have approved dozens of tax saving arrangements for highly paid officials.

Is this a scandal?  Yes it is.  Will anyone be held accountable?  I suspect not.  Is Danny Alexander, Chief Secretary to the Treasury, or Andrew Lansley UK Health Secretary, thinking about returning to the back benches?  Probably not.  Although Andrew Lansley does have other problems to deal with just now.  Will the officials blame the politicians?  Probably.  Will the politicians say they did not know.  Probably.  The more everything changes the more everything stays the same.

Three questions need to be asked and answered as soon as possible:

1.  When did this start?

2.  Who approved these arrangements?

3.  What is the total loss to the taxpayer?

I will no doubt come back to this issue.

Now to Glasgow Rangers FC.   Glasgow Rangers has effectively been forced into administration by HMRC.  HMRC is trying to recover at least £49m in tax and penalties resulting from Rangers use of employment benefit trusts to pay some of its players.  The final cost could be £75m.  There is also a dispute over £9m of PAYE and VAT following the takeover of the club in May 2011.  It also seems Glasgow Rangers are not alone.   Several English clubs are also in serious tax trouble.

I am glad that a number of commentators have noted that there may be a cost to the general public here.  If the tax is owed and is not paid then the Government either raises taxation, borrows even more or cuts public spending.  Even in these times £75m is a huge figure.    Again this is a story that is going to run and run.  The tax Tribunal that is dealing with the employment benefit trust issue is likely to announce its decision in the next few weeks.   It will be fascinating to see what if any comment is made on the dealings between Glasgow Rangers and HMRC to date.

I also noticed with interest this week that Hearts announced that they had now paid in full an outstanding tax bill that threatened their existence.

One final point on these matters.  Scotland is likely to have its own Exchequer in the next few years no matter what happens in 2014.  This gives us an opportunity to think about the tax system we want.   That is a matter I will no doubt keep coming back to.

Now to more mundane matters.

The battle between Eric Pickles, UK Communities and Local Government Secretary, continues unabated.   It is reported that at least 26 English councils intend to defy the UK Government’s proposed council tax freeze.

Now to some good news.  HMRC has temporarily scrapped its Business Records Checks project under which it planned to visit small businesses and fine them if their cash accounts were not up to date.   HMRC has said it will consult again before resurrecting this idea.  More information on this can be found here.

Now to the news that a number of bankers have been arrested in a tax fraud investigation.  The arrests include four current employees and one former employee of the Royal Bank of Scotland.  HMRC said the arrests concerned the financial affairs of the individuals and were not related to their work for the bank.  The background to this is an HMRC investigation into tax fraud through investments in UK film partnerships.  A BBC news website article on this can be found here.

Now to the land of the free and how tax is dominating the never ending  US presidential campaign.  Both the leading candidates for the Republican nomination, Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney, say that they will abolish estate tax and freeze the top rate of income tax at 35 per cent.  Newt Gingrich is also proposing that each taxpayer can opt for a flat 15 per cent income tax to replace all other taxes.  In response  President Obama has proposed to raise taxes on the “wealthy” in his 2013 budget.  Obama’s proposal includes $1.5 trillion (£950bn) in new taxes.  The majority of this arises from allowing Bush-era tax cuts to expire.  Obama is also calling for a “Warren Buffett” type plan tax hike on millionaires.   It seems that there is going to be a clear choice as far as taxation policy is concerned for the American people come November.

A brief mention of the fiscal powers debate.  David Cameron can surely do better than offering the possibility of unspecified greater fiscal powers if there is a “no” vote in 2014.   Also what does the fact that the Scotland Bill was barely mentioned tell us?  More on this next week.

Finally some good news for all of us who watched and supported Scotland over the last two weekends.  The Six Nations takes a break this weekend.

Have a good weekend.

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