Showing posts with label Liechtenstein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Liechtenstein. Show all posts

Sunday, 30 January 2011

Representing the sinners

Map of Tyburn gallows and immediate surroundin...Image via WikipediaPart of my work as a tax practitioner is to represent those who for one reason or another have not declared their income properly. Sometimes they have not declared their capital gains either. Sooner or later they need help from someone like me.

There are all sorts of reasons why people find themselves outside the tax system. I have certainly heard some tales. I can however see certain trends in the way my new clients might have fallen outside the system.

The innocent

Some individuals do start out in innocence in that they may start a very small business for “pin money” which would be well below the level of income tax or National Insurance. Their business might then take off, they think they ought to have told HM Revenue & Customs before, and they become afraid to do so for fear of retribution. Thus they go on outside the system for several years. At some point they are either caught by HMRC or (as I much prefer) they approach me for help because they simply want to come clean and meet their obligations to the Exchequer. I love people with a real conscience!

The oblivious

Strangely there are some who really never dream that they could possible be liable to tax. These are more commonly those who receive some sort of investment income upon which they “assume”, if they had thought about it at all, that the tax is already paid. Other people in this category may include those in receipt of rents on their property. Yes, there really are some extremely naïve types who have no idea that the Government might want its share of their income.

The not so innocent

This category really knows that they should be paying tax. They just like to live on the edge and take the risk of being caught, but somehow they do not expect to be. They may have earnings or have let property.

The net tightens

It is a popular belief amongst both the public and some accountancy and tax professionals that HMRC does not have the resources to catch tax evaders, and especially small time ones. They think that HMRC prefers to concentrate on the big fish amongst the dodgers by going after the miscreants who have substantial funds in Swiss bank accounts. They believe that the Liechtenstein Disclosure Facility represents the main type of evasion mainly being targeted.

HMRC have other strings to their bow. For example they have been checking the Land Registry and have been finding not only undeclared capital gains realised by property investors, but also significant undeclared rents from such properties. Judging from instructions I have received from new clients who have been found out, this is a very successful initiative.

All are welcome

Helping new clients who want to come out of the woodwork and into the system is very pleasing, and I am happy to assist those who have been nabbed by HMRC too. I don't judge people and in the end they all need help.

The variety of work is hugely satisfying, and once we have established that there is absolutely nothing else which has been forgotten in the way of income or gains, I can get a fair deal.

Of course I don't like tax evasion because dodging obligations to the Exchequer is much the same as taking the money out of our own back pockets. For the small timers, though, whether innocent, oblivious or a bit guilty, HMRC mainly wants them in the system rather than bankrupting them or hanging them at Tyburn Tree. In the end it is better to cough up some money and have someone like me represent them, because afterwards there will be no more looking over their shoulders.
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Saturday, 16 January 2010

HMRC tackles the medical profession with the Tax Health Plan

We professionals in the tax business are fond of offering tax health checks to prospective clients, but now we should be offering health checks to medical professionals, who are the target of HMRC's latest campaign to collect tax from perceived miscreants. I am sure the Revenue is not suggesting that all in the health business are into dodgy dealing and falsifying their tax returns, but presumably there must be a supposition that “extras” such as giving references to patients, signing passport applications and getting payments from pharmaceutical companies slip through into doctors' pockets unnoticed by their accountants or tax advisers. Those targeted who have something to report must notify their intention to do so by 31st March 2010 and have until 30th June 2010 to have made the disclosure and arranged to pay any tax that is due.

Given that we have had two opportunities for people to disclose their offshore bank accounts and we have the ongoing Liechtenstein Disclosure Facility, the HMRC tactic is simply to concentrate the minds of a particular group of taxpayers. I doubt that doctors are any worse or any better than many other trades or professions. I assume this must be the first of many initiatives targeting various sections of the business community.

Who will be next on the list? Pharmacists? Tyre fitters? Plumbers? Wheel-tappers and shunters? Accountants and allied professions? It is a novel idea to put each sector under the microscope, but it will take an awfully long time to get through the list. I hope HMRC gets some tax dodgers to confess, but doubt the tax take will be significant from each campaign, especially given the disappointing response to the recently closed second campaign on offshore accounts.

© Jon Stow 2010


Details of the HMRC Tax Health Plan


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Saturday, 12 December 2009

Dodging the Excise Men – encouraging a tax evasion society

In my business we frown upon tax evasion. It is our duty to uphold the law through helping our clients in their self assessment of their income, profits and their company accounts. We have to tread a firmer line than Joe or Jo Public, though unrepresented taxpayers may make mistakes in the Revenue's favour as well as their own. It is my experience that they do.

This week we have seen further hikes in taxation, principally through National Insurance and more obviously the return to 17.5% VAT. Personal Allowances are frozen for next year, so there will be some increase in the tax take through fiscal drag if there is any inflation in the interim. We will have to see. The Government has to balance the books having borrowed and spent so much on the banks and on the reduction in VAT this past year, the latter with no perceivable effect on the economy as many of us predicted in November 2008. It has to be paid for, and the full horror of the eventual deficit has yet to be revealed, and will only be known after the election next May, when either the Tories will be biting the bullet amidst squeals, or New (Old) Labour will have to come clean.

In the past, the higher the level of taxation, the less actual tax take. The lower the rates, the higher the honesty level and the better the tax take. This was seen notably in the tax-cutting eighties in the UK and especially under Reaganomics in America when the IRS profited greatly from lower rates of taxation.

People are going to be much less willing to pay their legal dues and HM Revenue & Customs do not have the resources to enforce payment through more investigation. I am not sure they even have enough resources (people) good enough to deal with the Liechtenstein Disclosure Facility. If you want a steady flow of anything including tax, you need a reliable channel. If you hike up tax, especially with HMRC's technical staff pared to the bone it is like trying to collect rainwater in a cup. In a deluge your cup will overflow. Most of it will escape. You need a measured channel and that means a more prosperous economy with a population willing to pay tax rather than driving more people into dishonesty to feed their families.

I think we will inevitably see a return to more dodgy dealing, and it will become popular like the public support for smugglers against the Excise Men in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. You will get more questions in shops such as “Do you want a receipt because I will have to charge VAT? Can you give me cash?.” and we know into whose back pocket those notes will go. The trouble is the tax which should have been paid by the trader will be coming out of your and my back pockets instead. How can we have got back to the bad old days?

© Jon Stow 2009


References

Smugglers and Excise Men
Liechtenstein Disclosure Facility