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A fine that isn’t a fine.

September 23, 2014

Yes, there were four other consultations which closed last week and on which I haven’t yet commented.  The Landfill Tax – Liability of waste ‘fines’ consultation closed last Friday, 19th, (at 5pm.  Because, reasons)  And, genuinely, it’s an interesting document.

The “fines” we’re talking about aren’t monetary fines to start with but

the smaller fractions of waste produced by any waste treatment process that includes an element of mechanical treatment. These fines are separated from other material using screening equipment (including large rotating screened cylinders called trommels) and can include a wide variety of wastes, including soil, paper, plastic, wood, metal etc.

All right then.  So why do we need a special bit of tax legislation about the mulch that comes out of a trommel?

Because there are two rates of Landfill Tax (I didn’t know that.  Did you know that?)

 a standard rate (currently £80 per tonne) for active wastes such as household waste which decays; and  a lower rate (currently £2.50 per tonne) for less-polluting wastes.

So a honking great differential between “active” and “less polluting” waste.  And, oh look, there’s a provision that says a load of less polluting waste that’s mixed with a bit – a “small amount” – of non-qualifying material, well, it can still get the lower rate rather than the upper rate.

Now, the consultation document isn’t clear on why identifying the proportion of non-qualifying material in “fines” is harder than in other waste but I’m guessing it’s because the “fines” are mashed up in processing so you can’t tell from looking at it.  There is, therefore, a proposal that a clear, objective, laboratory test should be used, the “loss on ignition” test.  As far as I can tell, you send a sample off to a laboratory where someone sets fire to it and sees what’s left over.

The consultation comes out of an industry working group and suggests a regime of partly mandatory and partly random testing, to be conducted by landfill site operators and for which they will pay (and presumably factor into their own charging) and it all seemed pretty sensible to me at a glance…

Except…

Current situation

2.2 We estimate there are approximately 6,000 waste transfer and treatment plants in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, of which about 450 produce fines, with approximately 4.5 million tonnes being produced each year. There are about 200 landfill site operators registered for landfill tax across the UK.

Well, except that, although I’m sure all the landfill site and waste disposal operators are lovely people and honest as the day is long, there is nevertheless a commercial relationship if not a commercial dependency between the landfill site operator and the person trucking their fines to landfill. And there’s a honking great differential between £80 a tonne and £2.50 a tonne, which would max out at £348,750,000 (the difference between £360 million and 11.25 million).  And where there’s a potential £348 million at stake I wonder how much corruption and graft might eventually creep into the best-conducted industry and how much potential there is for a race to the bottom.   I know we’re in an era of light touch regulation, and co-regulation, and unprecedented austerity and all that, where we let industries regulate themselves and we don’t have any government funds for civil servants or, goodness me no, scientists.

But I’d sleep a lot better at night if we didn’t have this consultation at all, and instead just had a few government inspectors turning up at random to do the checks themselves, on support of honest operators everywhere, and in protection of the rest of us.  Sigh.

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The West Lothian Question

September 19, 2014

I’m on the run out the door to a conference, but did I hear David Cameron correctly?  They’re hoping to settle the West Lothian question – to arrive at a constitutional settlement for England, Wales and Northern Ireland – to the same timetable as the devo max settlement with Scotland – by November?  By a Cabinet Committee?????

Without involving the Labour party?   Or any women??  Or any other ordinary people who don’t happen to have been appointed to the least diverse cabinet since the original Cabal???

What are they planning to do, issue a consultation document and give us three weeks to respond?  (I’m tempted to add, “and then ignore the responses”)

I’m busy reading up on Constitutional Law at present and it can be summed up as “tl:dr – it’s complicated”

I don’t have a great deal of confidence that it can be replaced by Christmas.

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Duck

September 16, 2014

Property again.  Was it the duck houses that irrevocably tainted the relationship between our government and the governed in the area of property policy?  Anyway, duck houses are the first things that come to my mind in connection with the idea we should reduce the administrative burden of the ATED – the annual tax on enveloped dwellings.

Because ATED is a rich buggers’ tax: it’s the “not-quite-a-Mansion-Tax” tax on houses that are owned by some kind of corporate entity to avoid Stamp Duty Land Tax.  The idea is that if you and I live in a house we own and then sell it we don’t pay capital gains tax but, if the house is worth enough, we have to pay stamp duty.  If we own two houses and sell one of them, well, we only get the CGT exemption (broadly) for one house at a time.  So if we had to sell the estate in Scotland to finance the country house in Berkshire we’d have to pay capital gains tax on the estate (pause for hollow laughter, because capital gains tax is a notoriously voluntary tax) and Stamp Duty Land Tax.  So we’d put the estate into a company, preferably offshore, and just sell the shares in the company instead, right?  Hence ATED, an annual tax on “enveloped dwellings” – houses that are put into some kind of corporate ownership rather than being owned by a natural person.

In that light, the fact that the tax only started in April last year and already the buggers are wanting the “burden” of administering the tax to be eased seems preposterous to me: the condoc says upfront that the entire aim of ATED in the first place is

to discourage enveloping, to encourage the de-enveloping of property and to ensure that those who continue to hold property in this way pay a fair share of tax

The consultation also says it should be read “by those currently within the charge to ATED… those who are likely to fall within the regime in the future, ATED practitioners and representative bodies” (Pause to boggle at the thought that there are already “ATED practitioners”)  Yes, I know that there are inoffensive businesses which have to claim exemption from ATED and it is, presumably, reducing the administrative burden on these which is the aim of the consultation.  They are listed as:

1) property rental businesses (including preparation for sale, demolition and conversion);

2) dwellings opened to the public;

3) property developers (including exchange of dwellings interests);

4) property traders carrying on a property trading business;

5) financial institutions acquiring dwellings in the course of lending;

6) dwellings used for trade purposes (occupation by qualifying employees and partners);

7) farmhouses (occupation for the purposes of carrying on a trade of farming) and

8) providers of social housing. (2.6)

You know, I might have been persuaded that there was some legitimate policy aim in here, if I hadn’t read on, past the list of inoffensive businesses to the list of those who have already been engaged in “informal discussions” with HMRC.

They’re helpfully listed in Annex A: let’s play “spot the one whose interests most closely align with your own.”

Barratts PLC

British Land Company

British Property Federation

Burges Salmon

Cadogan

Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT)

Clifford Chance

Council for Licensed conveyancers

Deloittes

Ernst & Young

FTI Consulting

Grosvenor

Hunters Solicitors

KPMG

Law Society

National Landlords Association

Rawlinson & Hunter

Smith & Williamson

Stephenson Harwood

Taylor Wimpey PLC

All worthy enterprises, of course, but what about the rest of us?  Isn’t this all really a bit like… asking MPs to decide their own expenses claims???

 

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Extra-statutory

September 15, 2014

Oh no!  I hope I don’t get delayed finishing this piece until after the consultation into Legislating Extra Statutory Concession D33 closes!  It closes at 3.30 today (because, reasons) so hurry along!

Actually that’s about the only comment I have on this consultation, sorry.  It’s a sensible idea – in the general tidying up of extra-statutory concessions that followed on from the  2005 Wilkinson case they have reached D33.  D33 was a sensible way around the possibility of a capital gains tax charge arising when someone received a compensation payment. Basically you’d get an imaginary “cost” or “value” of the right to take action equal to the actual amount you received, so you wouldn’t pay CGT.  There was a limit of half a million, after which you had to write to HMRC and ask nicely.

Now the limit is to be a million, and after that you pay CGT, but as the consultation points out, the courts will know that and, presumably, adjust the compensation accordingly.

Simplification that’s actually effective?  Well done!

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Property

September 12, 2014

I’m fascinated by the rationale behind the sixth and final tax consultation closing this week, into the Stamp Duty Land Tax rules for property investment funds.

As the foreword says:

The UK Investment Management industry is an important and successful part of the economy.  It accounts for 1% of GDP and a similar proportion of UK tax revenues, is a significant employer and is a key part of our wider financial services sector.

While the UK is Europe’s leading centre for fund management, often the funds themselves are located elsewhere.  About 36% of all assets under management in Europe are managed in the UK but only 11% are domiciled here…

The aim of this strategy is to improve the UK’s leading global role in fund management and increase our market share of fund domicile…

Reading between the lines (and not very far between them, to be honest) the consultation seems to have resulted from pressure from the investment management industry to relieve two types of investment from stamp duty land tax.  The first, CoACS, is a type of “authorised contractual scheme” introduced last year, a “co-ownership scheme” (the “co” from CoACS).  Investors own the underlying assets, but there’s a collective investment scheme doing the buying and selling.  Theoretically, they could be charged to SDLT every time someone joins or leaves the scheme, because the remaining investors’ shares of the property would go up or down.

The second type is PAIFs, property authorised investment funds, which were invented to enable people to invest in a mix of residential and non-residential property as well as real estate investment trusts.  Here the problem seems to be that when properties are moved into a PAIF even when the beneficial ownership doesn’t change there is a charge to SDLT and the consultation wonders whether these “seeding” transactions should be relieved from tax and, if so, how.

My issue with all this, of course, is that I genuinely don’t care if rich speculators have to pay some tax when they move their investments around from one kind of investment vehicle to another.  Looked at in that light, this isn’t a consultation that ought to be answered only by “the asset management and property sectors” but by the rest of us as well.

For example, in 2.6 we are asked to believe that the main impact of making the changes would be that property investment portfolios would be transferred into CoACSs and PAIFs which would “create larger pools of assets and benefit from economies of scale”.  But in 2.7 we learn that “more property funds would also mean greater competition within the sector”.  Would it, though?  Or would it just mean that the companies that blight the landscape with shopping malls and cookie cutter student accommodation would be enabled to do so without enduring some of the tax consequences?

Basically, what are we wanting from the property market?  Do we want to encourage “investors” to buy up (particularly residential) property in giant megacorps, or do we want the property market to be driven by something other than profits – like, say, the need actually to house people?  “Collective investment schemes are increasingly investing in residential property and [the government] does not want to limit growth in this area” (3.9)  You know what?  Fuck that.  If we were talking about assisting organisations that were planning to BUILD residential property then yes, I’d say let’s make life easy for them.  But we’re not.  We’re talking about the organisations that bundle and securitise assets, squeeze all the profits they can out of them, and then walk away.  Let them at least pay taxes on doing so.  One per cent of the economy?  The housing market is somewhere between five and 18% of GDP.  Let’s concentrate on the bit that actually provides houses for people to live in, rather than profits for investment portfolios.

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I circumvent, you avoid, he -?

September 11, 2014

“…The previous rules applied only where the worker’s contract was one where he was obliged to provide services personally. It was therefore possible to circumvent the legislation by placing a right of substitution into the contract.” (from Taxation 20 August £)

And this is why we’ll never have tax simplification.

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“throughout the development…”

September 10, 2014

Traditionally an Impact Assessment is published with a consultation document.  But Impact Assessment for tax changes is conducted via the “tailored tax impact assessment process” and published in a TIIN “at the point at which the policy design is final or near final”.

Does this explain why there were four separate consultation documents published by HMRC without any consideration in them of the impact the proposals might have, or at least of any coherent statement of the possible impacts?

The four consultations which closed yesterday (at 11.45pm.  Because, reasons) were on four separate aspects of the PAYE regime which the Office of Tax Simplification had identified as ripe for simplification.  There were 27 pages on exemption for paid or reimbursed expenses, 21 pages on abolition of the £8500 “higher paid” threshold, 29 pages on voluntary payrolling and another 17 pages on trivial benefits exemption. They each have different officials named as lead and, aside from identical forewords from David Gauke, appear to have been written by different hands.  But although they all talk about the administrative burden saving that will flow from any change, none of them has the usual table of impacts quantifying these impacts, nor any statement of what the impact might be on equality groups or on small businesses.

I wonder what would happen if someone were to make a Freedom of Information Act request for sight of the current state of the “tailored tax impact assessment process” for each?  I’m just saying…

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Bless!

September 9, 2014

Let’s have a quick gallop through the consultations closing today.  I haven’t actually sent in a response to any of them: I’m becoming sufficiently cynical to think there is no point in an individual responding to a consultation at all, particularly when your feedback could be summed up as “you aren’t telling me enough to let me formulate a sensible answer”.

First, let’s look at the one that closes first (5pm, as opposed to 11.45pm.  Because, reasons.)  It’s on VAT Prompt Payment Discounts: there’s a change to the way businesses have to invoice if they give prompt payment discounts.  According to the impact assessment, it’ll affect a quarter of a million businesses and add around £8 million of one-off costs and around £3.5 million of annual recurring costs to their administrative burden.  Yet all HMRC can say by way of small firms impact is “the measure will impact on all businesses that offer or receive prompt payment discounts, including small firms.”  So will it cost them more or less than large businesses?  How many of them are affected?  Have you spoken to them?  Will they be able to cope with the change?  Who knows?  I’m tempted to add – from HMRC’s point of view, it seems – who cares?

I note in passing that David Cameron believes that adding a specific question about family impact to impact assessments will mean that “Policies that fail to support family life will not be allowed to proceed.”  Just like adding a small firms impact test to impact assessments prevented policies with a disproportionate impact on small businesses from proceeding, right?  Bless!

 

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Midnight at 100PS

September 8, 2014

Imagine the scene: it’s eleven thirty pm and the clock is ticking down towards midnight at 100 Parliament Street.  A crack team of HMRC and HMT civil servants are clustered around a single computer terminal, the sickly light the only source of illumination in the vast emptiness of their cavernous shared workspace (where, in daylight, a hundred drones compete for every 65 chairs).  Someone seated at the terminal constantly hits the “refresh” button, while another holds a stopwatch, and their colleagues’ gazes flick nervously between the two.  At 11.42 they start to make eye contact with each other, the light of hope dawning in their eyes.  At 11.43 there are some fingers crossed.  At 11.44 someone begins a lugubrious countdown and gradually the rest of them join in: ten… nine… eight… seven… six… Five!  Four!   THREE!   TWO!!  ONE!!!  11.45 pm everyone!  The Consultation into the New Employee shareholding vehicle is now CLOSED!

Champagne is opened.  Someone hits refresh for one last time and the whole crowd erupts: LOOK AT THAT! THIS LOSER SENT IN HIS RESPONSE AT 11.47 BWA HA HA HA HA…

Well of course it’s nonsense!  What happens in real life is you set the date for your consultation to close, you hear nothing much till the actual day, and then they all tumble in at once, some before midnight, some after, and you pick them up when you come in the next morning.  And, yes, including the ones sent hopefully at 4.30am and, if you’re feeling generous, the ones that came in half an hour after you did but before you’d finished reading the rest of them.

Nothing hangs on a consultation deadline, not to the degree of precision that requires a countdown anyway.  You need the responses to be sent so that you have time to read them and consider what’s said before you have to commit to any further action.  You might have Parliamentary and other deadlines to meet, but you know your consultation guidelines and you allow as much time as you can to give the participants giving you valuable feedback some reasonable chance of considering your proposals at leisure.  What you don’t – ever, in my experience – do, is to cut off people whose response is signed off five minutes late.

So why the devil has gov.uk started giving deadlines with actual time limits – 5pm, 11.45 pm, 12.00am – on the open consultations?  What will actually happen if I send in my response to the consultation into legislating ESC D33 at 3.31pm rather than at 3.29?  As our younger netizens say, WTF, gov.uk?

Here’s the list:

9 September 2014 5.00pm VAT: Prompt Payment Discounts

9 September 2014 11.45pm Employee benefits and expenses: exemption for paid or reimbursed expenses

9 September 2014 11.45pm Employee benefits and expenses: abolition of the £8,500 threshold for lower paid employment and form P9D

9 September 2014 11.45pm Employee benefits and expenses: real time collection of tax on benefits in kind and expenses through voluntary payrolling

9 September 2014 11.45pm Employee benefits and expenses: trivial benefits exemption

12 September 2014 11.45pm Stamp Duty Land Tax rules for property investment funds

15 September 2014 3.30pm Legislating Extra Statutory Concession D33

16 September 2014 5.00pm Annual Tax on Enveloped Dwellings: reducing the administrative burden for business

19 September 2014 5.00pm Landfill tax – liability of waste ‘fines’

19 September 2014 5.00pm VAT relief on substantially and permanently adapted motor vehicles for disabled wheelchair users

19 September 2014 5.00pm Sharing and publishing export data for public benefit

22 September 2014 5.00pm Improving the operation of the Construction Industry Scheme (CIS)

10 October 2014 5.00pm Office of Tax Simplification review of unapproved share schemes: marketable security

10 October 2014 11.45pm New Employee shareholding vehicle

15 October 2014 12.00am Inheritance Tax: exemption for emergency service personnel

16 October 2014 5.00pm Internationally mobile employees and earnings related securities

22 October 2014 9.30am implementing agreements under the global standard on automatic exchange of information

23 October 9.30am Strengthening the Tax Avoidance Disclosure Regimes

31 October 2014 5pm Tackling offshore tax evasion: Strengthening civil deterrents

31 October 2014 5pm Tackling offshore tax evasion: A new criminal offence

Hmmm… looks like a busy day tomorrow.

 

[Note: edited 9th September to reflect the fact there are four consultations closing at 11.45pm tonight and not 3: I had misread the Trivial Benefits closure date as 19th and not 9th.  Sorry!]

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Rejoice! Only a fifth of government legislation is nonsense! (last year it was a quarter)

August 27, 2014

Great news today from the Regulatory Policy Committee, the independent scrutineers of Impact Assessments.  There has been an improvement in the number of Impact Assessments marked as “fit for purpose”, from 75-77% to 80%.

Yes, that’s right.  Instead of a quarter of the government’s legislation having an evidence base which is not fit for purpose, it’s now only one in five – rejoice!

Let’s take a step back and look at what this means, shall we?  First of all, what is an Impact Assessment?  It’s a document that sets out the reasoning behind the government making a piece of legislation, particularly what the costs and benefits will be, and whether there are any other impacts on, for example, equality, small businesses, carbon emissions and, coming soon (if we are to believe David Cameron)  impacts on families.  They are supposedly a key part of policy development, making sure that the only legislation which sees the light of day is based on robust evidence.  I say “supposedly” because in my experience they are also on occasions produced at the last minute, between the policy being finalised and the announcement seeing the light of day, solely to justify the actions being taken rather than as part of a judicious consideration of alternatives.  At their heart, though, Impact Assessments should show you that there’s a good reason for the government to take the action that it’s taking.

So why would a panel of independent experts find that the ones you were publishing were “not fit for purpose”?  Well, let’s look at a few examples, shall we?  How about the BIS attempt to change the Trades Unions’ register of members regulations, where they managed not to know what they were requiring unions to do, not to give a long enough consultation for the unions to talk to them about it, and not to work out how much it would all cost to implement.  No?

Well then, how about the Cabinet Office trying to consult on the proposal to introduce a register of lobbyists, where they managed to forget to explain why they were proposing the change in the first place, what options were available, whether there were any benefits from what they were proposing, oh, and to base their costs on a register of dental professionals that the RPC thought was “unclear how relevant”!

I’m sorry, but as a former Impact Assessment professional you have to allow me my moment of schadenfreude here.  There is a serious point, however, which is that by the time an Impact Assessment goes to the RPC for its opinion, the responsible Minister will have physically signed the form (Jo Swinson in the case of the TU register) if it’s a final IA, or will have approved the documents for issue if it’s a consultation (Oliver Letwin and Mark Harper for the Lobbyists consultation) so the IA is the place where “the rubber meets the road” – the place where the responsible Minister has to rely on his Civil Service to give him the facts.  You don’t expect him or her personally to investigate whether the numbers should be 42 or 43, but you do expect them to be able to be confident that when they sign a piece of paper saying it’s 42 they’re damned certain there’s an infrastructure in place that gives them assurance they’ve got the right figures in their hands.

It’s embarrassing to the Minister, then, to be found wanting by the RPC.  It’s embarrassing to the government to have its expertise found wanting by a panel it appointed to give it independent scrutiny.

And then sometimes they go ahead and just plain do it anyway.

 a red-rated ‘not-fit-for-purpose’ opinion does not mean the policy is flawed, but that the evidence as presented in the impact assessment is lacking. Decisions on whether to proceed with regulatory proposals following the publication of an RPC opinion are for ministers to take. 

So that’s all right, then.  The impact assessment shows you the rationale and evidence for a piece of regulatory legislation.  Around a fifth of them aren’t fit for purpose.  But then the government can go ahead and do what it likes anyway, regardless of whether there’s any evidence underpinning what it wants to do.

But what of tax changes, I hear you ask?

Hmmm… well, for tax changes the impact assessment is contained in the TIIN, the Tax Information and Impact Note.  How do I know?  Because David Gauke told Parliament it was, so by definition it must be true. But, oddly enough, the New Approach to Tax Policy Making somehow forgot to include external scrutiny of the evidence base for tax changes, so the TIINs don’t go to the RPC.  I’m a lot keener on the idea that they should now that I no longer work on them, of course.  Practical experience tells me it’s enough of a nightmare to get the book of TIINs out of the door in time for the Budget and the autumn statement, let alone having to wrangle them past an external scrutiny panel first.

It would be difficult to do, and inconvenient for the civil servants who have to do it, and expensive for the government (because they’d need shed-loads more people on the RPC and so they’d need to resource them better, not to mention they’d need a big spike in analyst resource to get the TIINs produced in time to get them to the RPC in time to get the Budget out of the door on time so they’d probably have to buy in some resource there, too…)  But those are project management problems, not issues of principle.

It would be difficult in terms of Budget secrecy, too – increase the number of people who know about a package of measures by the number of people needed to give them independent scrutiny and you of course increase the number of opportunities for things to go astray.  Again, though, a practical rather than a principle issue.

Is there a principle behind the lofty insistence that tax is different and special?

No, I don’t have an answer: it’s a genuine question.  Is there?