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Language, Timothy!

March 4, 2013

Back to the Mail Online again today for the story about the top dozen UK companies that pay no tax.  Serendipitously, there’s some thoughtful material on the same subject from Robert Maas in the last issue of Taxation (behind a paywall, sorry) where he asks “Are organisations really dodging tax, or are they just following the rules?”

This brings me back to the language of tax; Maas makes some reasonable points

  • Amazon makes its UK sales through a Luxembourg subsidiary.  It has warehousing in the UK, but under the 1968 Double Taxation agreement with Luxembourg a warehouse doesn’t constitute a “permanent establishment” that would make the sales from that warehouse taxable in the UK.
  • Starbucks has its intellectual property in a Netherlands company (in other words the know-how of how to run a branch of Starbucks) and it franchises UK shops.  So the profits made by an individual franchise would be payable by the franchisee in the UK, but would be decreased by the amount it pays to Holland for the know-how.

but his conclusion – “Most of the so-called avoidance schemes that are being publicly criticised are not avoidance at all” is a bit more difficult if you’re not a tax expert.

The fact is that the person on the Clapham omnibus – the tax muggle, if you will – doesn’t care about the complexity of tax legislation but applies the “it’s not fair” test.  It doesn’t feel fair that I have spent £100 on books without leaving my chair and that a British postman has brought them right to my door, but because I bought them from Amazon instead of [insert name of non-Amazon book seller here.  There must still be one somewhere, right?] then the profits the seller made aren’t taxed here but in Luxembourg.

Similarly it feels wrong if I’m sitting in Sheffield drinking a caramel macchiatto and eating my red velvet cake but somehow the profits from selling them to me get taxed in Holland.

But if we talk about tax avoidance in these terms it seems to me we’re generating heat without light.  “It’s not the firms, it’s the system” yes, maybe – but where does that get us?  The interesting thing to me is the government’s ambition to make the UK a “competitive” tax system, to show that it’s “open for business”.  That’s where I can shrug and agree with Maas that it’s not necessarily a “fault” for a company to arrange its trade in a way that takes advantage of the “competitiveness” of the different tax regimes in different countries: the issue isn’t with the actions of the company but with the people who designed the system in which they operate.

Perhaps, though, the issue takes us back to the one which didn’t really get bottomed out in the PAC hearings – if the fault is in the way the government makes its tax legislation, then the whiff of something smelly comes from the involvement of the same big businesses that profit from “tax competitiveness” in designing the competing systems.  That’s why we shouldn’t have a revolving door between industry and civil service, and why we should have records of meetings between Ministers and civil servants and industry representatives.

And, while we’re at it, why we ought to have the Small Firms Impact Test back in the list of things that must be included in the work of policy development, rather than archived at the back of the bus and replaced by some meaningless warm words.

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Seriously?

February 28, 2013

I mean, seriously, Daily Mail?

HMRC recruits well-paid investigators and inspectors — often from universities or accountancy firms.
It has also launched a so-called tax academy to train inspectors.

Yes, a sinister cadre of… whisper it… people who might know what they’re talking about!  Why, I bet some of them even wear glasses… closet intellectuals, the lot of them.

Then the dark forces at work in HMRC even – prepare to gasp in horror – train them to do their jobs!  In a tax academy, no less.  (As opposed, presumably, to a plumbing apprenticeship?  Or a PhD in rocket sciences?)

I’m tempted to make a sarcastic comment about, oh, I don’t know, a “so called” newspaper.  But that would be petty.

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Tax prat or muggle?

February 26, 2013
http://www.parliamentlive.tv/Embed/js.ashx?12458 460x322"
For me, it all started with the Public Accounts Committee under Margaret Hodge.  Their questioning of representatives of the Big Four accountancy firms was an object lesson in failure to communicate (the video, all two hours of it, is linked at the top of this post, if you have the patience and if the technology works)  As a result of this hearing Taxation magazine labelled Hodge “Tax Prat of the Year”.
Now to me this sounds like the Harry Potter wizards labelling all non-wizards as “muggles” – a separate and lesser breed.  Do we really want the discourse on tax to be based on the idea that there are only Some People – people who can quote Cape Brandy Syndicate and know why Delaware isn’t really a tax haven – who have any stake in the discussion?  Are you a Tax Prat?  Are you a Tax Muggle?  Tax muggles of the world unite!  
However Taxation were also sporting enough to publish my satirical article, “How to handle a tax prat” in response to their piece. It’s behind a paywall on Taxation magazine’s website, but, with permission, here it is in full for anyone who’s interested and who doesn’t subscribe:

How to handle a tax prat

Are we trying to raise awareness about tax avoidance or suppress discussions?

KEY POINTS

  • Tax avoidance in the public eye.
  • Dealing with criticism.
  • Complexity of the tax law.
  • Customise responses.

We are all tax professionals here, right? We get it. We understand. There is a continuum that goes from tax planning via tax avoidance to tax evasion, and we are always on the right side of it.

There is something very soothing about being in a civilised discussion with people who speak the same language.

I am sure we all appreciated the identification of Margaret Hodge as a “tax prat” [1] for her chairmanship of the public accounts committee, particularly the session where they tried to pull a Paxman on the Big Four.

Even the people in HMRC were annoyed: that comment about the size of their brains is going to rankle for a few years.

Margaret Hodge is not the only one. I am sure we have all had that uncomfortable feeling of trying to talk to someone who doesn’t speak our language.

Perhaps you have come up against one of those people who thinks that country-by-country reporting is a good idea? What about someone who wants company tax computations or personal tax returns to be published?

There are people who do not know that “there is no equity in tax” and think that there ought to be some kind of principle of fairness involved in taxation – imagine that!

So if you come across someone like that, someone who is, in fact, a “tax prat”, you will need this handy guide.

Countering your opponents

Tired of discussions of tax in the newspapers and on television? Worn out from unwarranted criticism of your chosen profession? Frustrated with having to respond to each new argument carefully and conscientiously?

We can help! If you come across an argumentative civilian, a tax prat if you will, all you need to do is to follow the structured steps set out below.

1. Control what your audience sees

Do not allow people who think there is something wrong with tax avoidance to set the terms of the debate.

Say the “drama unfolded live on Parliament TV” and generated a Twitter storm from “those tax professionals who were watching”.

Do not (especially not in your online edition) link to the text of what was said [2], or embed the video stream, or Storify the tweets [3].

Many of your readers will not even realise they have not heard what was said. If you make sure you never quote anything in context, they never will. If anyone asks you for a link, obfuscate.

Remember, you are the editor of a tax magazine: it is not your responsibility to educate anyone about how tax “really” works.

If people lose their heads and start to Google on their own, don’t worry, not all is lost – go to step two.

2. Attack the person, not the argument

If you can make it clear your opponent is on a “personal crusade”, “idiosyncratic and ill informed”, engaged in a “vendetta” and, this is always a good one with a female opponent, “aggressive”, you don’t need to bother addressing any of the concerns.

Those two steps will get you through almost any argument with a tax prat but there will come a time when you need to engage in an actual discussion about tax avoidance itself.  If that happens, take a deep breath, smile, and go on to step three.

3. Argue against straw men

Remember: responding to what your opponent says should always be a last resort. Never underestimate the power of simply arguing against what you would like her to have said.

Suppose she says something like:

“I think you are a bunch of really clever people. You are clever, well remunerated and very experienced, I have no doubt of that. What depresses me is that you could contribute so much to society and the public good and you all choose to focus on an area that reduces the resources available for us to build schools, hospitals and transport infrastructure…”

In that event, focus carefully on the tone of the discussion instead. Say something about how the committee “forget that they are neither in a criminal court nor at prime minister’s questions, and … adopt a point-scoring and aggressive tone which generates heat without ever casting light”.

After all, it’s entirely accurate (they are politicians, after all) and why should a bunch of politicians get away with treating the tax profession like Jeremy Paxman treats them?

But even if you have to face direct criticism, there are ways. The next step?

4. Deflect attention away from the specific criticism

Remember, people outside the tax profession often think we are a bunch of parasites. So here is a list of helpful phrases to start deflecting attention away from specific discussions of tax avoidance. They can be used in almost any context.

  • The tax law is very complex in the UK and internationally.
  • The Finance Bill that was just passed is 50 pages longer than any other Finance Bill.
  • Countries are competing for tax revenue more than they ever have done.
  • We are giving the best that we can to businesses that are competing internationally.
  • It is not an offence at all to have a difference of interpretation about what the law means.
  • It is a supply chain management issue.

5. Tax avoidance, if we have to use that term, is better than the alternative

Sometimes, with the best will in the world, you will find yourself up against an opponent who is so persistent that you find yourself in the middle of an actual conversation about tax avoidance.

Well, worse things happen at sea, and in most cases you can get by with a few handy responses. Try one of these:

  • I think, with respect, you are underestimating the skills and quality of HMRC.
  • If you collected VAT from a customer and did not hand it on, it would be a criminal offence.
  • Evasion is illegal and tax avoidance is not.
  • Delaware is not a tax haven.
  • It is a supply chain management issue.

6. Prove your opponent has mistaken some other quality for tax avoidance

In a worst-case scenario, you may need to respond to specific points in your opponent’s argument. In these cases, familiarity with the piece of tax law in question will help you customise your response to best effect.

Warning: not all of the responses below will be applicable to all situations. Make sure that you only use responses appropriate for the current argument.

  • The Netherlands has some privileged tax regimes, but essentially it is offering facilities to businesses to base employment, jobs and development there.
  • US multinationals directly employ some 5% of the Irish workforce and indirectly probably another 15%. Without that contribution, Ireland would probably be in even more trouble than it is.
  • Insurance companies operate out of the Isle of Man and Guernsey because the UK’s regulatory regime is too onerous.
  • Country-by-country reporting would have huge costs, enormous complexity and, in some cases, commercial confidentiality, but I am in favour of greater transparency.
  • The problem with that proposal is that it is data, not information.
  • Delaware is not a tax haven.
  • It is a supply chain management issue.
  • Our main purpose is to help our clients calculate and pay their tax.

Here to help

So there you have it. There is no need to feel downhearted by all the negative press about tax avoidance. It’s just that tax outsiders simply don’t understand.

Wendy Bradley is a PhD student researching the relationship between tax simplification and better regulation. She is a former member of HMRC’s Better Regulation team and writes a tax blog.  She can be contacted by email.

Happy to carry on the discussion, in comments here or on Taxation’s site, or on twitter (@wendybradley).  If you’re interested, I was also contacted by Tax Journal and there are quotes from me in the second half of this article, here.  That’s BOTH taxation magazines crossed off the bucket list, in the same week!

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Moving on

February 21, 2013

Seventy days and counting since the Treasury updated the tax consultations page, but the HMRC consultations page has had a couple of new ones added – look down at the bottom of the page – with extremely short deadlines.

So if you’re interested in the taxation of non-doms you need to check out the third iteration of consultation on legislating the extra statutory concession 1/09, a consultation on some revised legislation that was issued on 11 February where the consultation closes on February 25th.  I don’t intend to respond, as it’s a small and very techy change to do with non-domiciled people employed in work that takes place both inside and outside the UK and what to do about bank accounts where employment earnings from both UK and non-UK work is received.  Frankly, I don’t care: but I DO care that it’s stupidly complex legislation that would have been better tackled by a proper review of (and, preferably, abolition of) the entire concept of non-doms.  But there you are.  A two week consultation.  How’s that working out for you?

The second one is the procurement guidance: the much vaunted plan to prevent tax avoiders from benefiting from government contracts.  Given that this was announced in September it’s hard to see why it needs to be open for public consultation for a mere fourteen days (it was issued on 14th February and closes on 28th) but I rather suspect the answer is that there’s not going to be any alterations to it, whatever the feedback.  The government seems to have found a reasonably workable plan to use relatively objective criteria to decide what sort of avoidance is objectionable enough to allow them to disbar a firm from government contracts without falling foul of EU procurement rules.  So if a firm has used a DOTAS scheme that doesn’t work, or if it uses a scheme that falls foul of the GAAR or a TAAR, or it has a civil or criminal penalty, well, it won’t get a government contract.

Here’s the real test.  Would it have stopped the Mapeley contract, where the old Inland Revenue accidentally sold its property portfolio to a firm based in a tax haven?

No.

In which case, frankly, who cares?

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Budget suggestions

February 18, 2013

The Treasury website asking for Budget representations is open until 20th February.  This is, in effect, a giant electronic suggestions box where any “stakeholder” is invited to put forward ideas for changes that they would like to see as part of the Budget process.

Now, you might think that, as I have already suggested a wish list of ten changes to the tax and benefits system I’d like to see in 2013, I would simply be sticking a link to that post through the letterbox and walking away.  But you’d be wrong.  Because as I see it, there’s a difference between the kind of small incremental changes that an external stakeholder can ask for as part of the Budget process, and the kind of large-scale politically-contentious change I asked for in my New Year’s Wish List.

I do, however, have a modest proposal which I think might be actionable as a minor Budget tweak, and it’s this.  Stop collection of unpaid Gift Aid from basic rate taxpayers.

Let me explain.  I know a couple of pensioners who have fallen foul of the rule that means, if you tick the gift aid box when you’re donating to charity, you have to have paid more tax than the amount the charity reclaims, or else you have to pay the tax yourself.

Think about that for a moment.  A pensioner on say £12k – basic state pension and a few quid from a works pension scheme – gets just under a grand a month net and pays £300 a year in tax  (personal allowance of 10500 so 1500pa is taxable at 20%).

They put a tenner a week in the collection box at church, but because the church is well organised it actually goes into a little envelope with an identifying number on it that matches up to the gift aid declaration they signed, so their £10×52= £520 is actually worth £624 to the church, because they claim back 20% of the amount – 104 – from the Treasury.

But then when you’re doing their tax return you find out that they also put another tenner in the collection when they go to the Wednesday service, so there’s another £520 on which a further £104 gift aid is claimed.  And that’s without the £100 that went to the Lifeboats, the £100 to the local hospice, £100 on Red Nose day and of course the £25 a month direct debit to the homeless…  So suddenly you’re looking at a total of £1640 in charitable donations over the course of the year on which £328 has been claimed back from Treasury and they’re £28 over.

Now in a sane world you’d ignore it, wouldn’t you?

Well that’s not what happens.  In both cases I know of, the return was amended and they were made to pay up the £28, and their previous three returns were looked at and they were made to pay any trivial amounts they’d over-donated in those years, and now one is scared stiff of “getting into trouble” and won’t tick the Gift Aid box on anything she donates to anyone.

Now, there are problems with Gift Aid.  Apparently there are around £10m of fraudulent Gift Aid claims each year (remember the Omnishambles Budget attempts to stop it?) But those problems are organised fraud which ought (at least in my view) to be treated via criminal rather than civil procedures – and they certainly aren’t caused by pensioners over-donating twenty-eight quid.

And the Treasury has itself introduced a new quasi-gift-aid relief for charities that doesn’t rely on a link between the tax payer and the tax paid, the Gift Aid Small Donations Scheme, which, I notice, was introduced to reduce the administrative burden on charities of Gift Aid… but which assesses them as “negligible” in its Impact Assessment.

So here’s my Budget suggestion.  Make any overpayment of charitable donations by a basic rate taxpayer non-collectable.  If a basic rate taxpayer chooses to tithe or otherwise give more money away than the tax they have paid, well, it’s going to be peanuts in the great scheme of things, and entirely likely to cost more to collect than the tax itself.

Here’s what I sent.  Now, I usually say you’re welcome to adopt or adapt this kind of response and of course you are.  And I also usually say I’m not campaigning for my point, because usually officialdom doesn’t respond well to campaigns.

Budget suggestions are different.  If I send this in on my own, my guess is it’ll be ignored.  If it turns out other people agree with me, well… who knows.

Make Gift Aid overpayments non-collectable from basic rate taxpayers

1. Background/Introduction

At least two pensioners of my acquaintance have at different times fallen foul of the rule that collects back taxes from people who donate slightly more in gift-aided charitable donations than the tax they pay. In each case the process was bureaucratic, frightening and appeared punitive to the pensioner concerned, and indeed one is now so frightened of “getting into trouble again” with her tax that she will not tick the gift aid box on any charitable donation. This is not, I contend, the aim of the legislation, nor of the administration of the tax system.

2. Concerns

A basic rate taxpayer is normally unlikely to give more in charitable donations than they pay in tax. The exceptions are likely to be pensioners, for whom a tithe of an income around 10-15k can easily take them into the “danger” area. It is also hard to understand and apply the legislation at that age, and it is particularly distressing for someone in those circumstances to find they are treated as a wrongdoer by HMRC. The cost of collecting an excess payment of £20 or £30 must far outweigh the benefit of collecting the money – as indeed the Treasury has acknowledged by introducing the GADS where NO connection between the taxpayer and the gift aided amount is required.

3. Aims/Proposals

My proposal does not require legislation but simple administrative action. HMRC should be instructed not to seek to collect any gift aid overpayments from basic rate taxpayers; they should issue guidance which says this is what they will do, and then they should do it. They would retain the ability to collect any tax due from anyone undertaking some kind of avoidance scheme (channelling funds from another source to a dubious charity via a pensioner, for example) because the law would remain as it is. They would simply, under their “care and management of the tax system” powers, not do it for the odd fifty quid from a too-generous pensioner.

  • likely effectiveness and value for money; this would save money – the resource HMRC spends on such cases is, in my view, sadly misplaced and could easily be more productively spent.
  • revenue implications for the Exchequer; negligible – the GADS scheme IA says that the costs to the Exchequer, the administrative burden and HMRC costs of the GADS scheme are “negligible” and I contend that this change would be less expensive than GADS and include at least the same administrative saving
  • wider macroeconomic implications (for economic stability and growth); none
  • sectoral impacts; the impact on the charitable sector is likely to be nil – the intention is not to change behaviour but simply not to punish existing over-generous donation
  • distributional impacts; the principal impact would be on pensioners, who are the most likely group to be in the marginal income band where a tithe of income would be more than the amount of tax paid. It is wholly within the government’s ambition for a simpler tax system that they should not be mithered about the odd twenty quid over-donation
  • administrative and compliance costs and issues; compliance costs for HMRC should be reduced
  • legislative and operational requirements; I consider this could be done under HMRC’s “care and management” powers.
  • environmental impact. None

4.   Conclusion

Gift Aid is a good idea. Punishing pensioners because they have given a few quid too much, isn’t. Ceasing to pursue such cases is a simple change which would free up HMRC resource, free a number of pensioners from unnecessary stress and worry, and is wholly in line with the government’s stated aims for a simpler tax system.

Wendy Bradley February 2012

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Ferris Bueller’s day off

February 7, 2013

As Ferris Bueller observed, “Life moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.”  Looks like the Treasury have taken him a bit literally and stopped altogether – no doubt to take a better look.  Yes, the Tax Updates and Consultations Tracker page still hasn’t been updated since 14th December 2012 which I make to be 56 days and counting.  If we’re moving to a world where a consultation doesn’t need to last three months, shouldn’t we know a bit more about whether there are any and when they might close?

As it happens, there are in fact now three open consultations, aside from the technical consultation on the Finance Bill package.  But you won’t find them on the Treasury page, they’re on the HMRC page instead.

So let’s look at the first one, which closes on 14 March.  Consultation on the withdrawal of the VAT exemption for research.  Who should read this?

All suppliers of business or non-business research and those that commission research.

(Pauses to wave to everyone she knows in any university anywhere.  Helloooooo!)

Although it’s possible some of them already know.  Because, once the EU decided that the UK exemption from VAT for “business supplies of research between eligible bodies” doesn’t comply with EU legislation, well…

HMRC have had confidential discussions with some representative bodies with a view to obtaining the information sought in this consultation. As the outcome of these discussions was inconclusive as to the impact, we have decided to undertake a full consultation.

which I read as meaning “we asked them, and they gave us different answers, and – help!”

Let’s see.

I suspect it’s because a Venn diagram of “people who know anything about VAT” and “people who know anything about how university research is funded” would have about twelve people in the overlap bit and those twelve people have better things to do than seek out and respond to government consultations.  But I’m not sanguine that the government has got it right, or that the impact will be as slight as they seem to think.

In the “background” part of the consultation they identify three different kinds of research, research that is block funded or grant funded and so is “non business” research – and so outside the scope of VAT.  Phew!  And then there’s business research, where a company pays a university to carry out some research for it, and expects to make a profit from exploiting the intellectual property so created.  And the third category, the one affected by the change, is where there’s a contract between two “eligible bodies”, where “eligible bodies” means a university or public body or similar.

So – taking a not random example – I once took part in some medical research, where the research was (as far as I knew) conducted by a university and funded (so far as I know) by part of the NHS. Those would both be “eligible bodies” if I understand the consultation document.  So their contract would, in future, have to include VAT in any payment.

OK then – does that affect anyone, and how are they affected?

Let’s look at the hypothetical examples.

1). A charity grant funds University A to carry out some research. The supply University A makes to the charity is outside the scope of VAT. However, University A needs to subcontract part of the research to University B. At present, the supply University B makes to University A is exempt from VAT but after the exemption is withdrawn it will be taxable (20% VAT). This will not affect the supply University A makes to the charity which will remain outside the scope of VAT.

In this scenario, University A’s costs increase by the VAT charged by University B. However, since University B can now deduct input tax on making this supply, this may allow, in some cases, for a lower net price to be charged to University A.

I do enjoy that “may” and “some” – in other words, because the university which has to charge VAT may also be able to deduct any VAT it suffers in carrying out the research, it might be able to charge less.  This is not a simplifying measure, and the consultation seems to me to grossly underestimate the amount of effort which goes into devising asymmetrical VAT schemes that seem to offer people the holy grail of being able to buy stuff without paying VAT but not to charge VAT on the stuff they sell.  I wouldn’t mind betting that one of the reasons the hypothetical twelve people who understand VAT and research funding aren’t responding to the consultation is because they are busy wondering how they can make sure that everything they buy goes into the non-exempt contract, and everything they sell winds up outside of it.

Then there’s the second example.

2). A commercial company provides funding to University Z to conduct research with the expectation that there will be intellectual property produced. The supply made by University Z to the commercial company is a standard-rated business supply. However, University Z needs to subcontract part of the research to University X. At present, the supply made by University X to University Z is exempt from VAT but after the exemption is withdrawn it will be taxable (20% VAT). This will not affect the supply made by University Z to the commercial company which will remain taxable at the standard rate.

In this scenario, University Z’s costs will be the same since they will be able to deduct the VAT charged by University X as directly attributable to their onward supply to the commercial company.

I know that VAT is theoretically meant to be a simple tax which is only charged once in any transaction, and that the VAT charged and paid theoretically cancels itself out in all the other steps in a supply chain, but do we really want our universities to be places where serious intellectual effort is diverted into understanding and operating VAT?  I mean, I’m not a VAT person myself, but doesn’t the same “la la la, they’ll be able to charge less” condition apply to University X in example 2 as to University B in example 1?  And isn’t the idea that they “may” charge less as a result as weaselly in example 2 as in example 1?

Incidentally, if you want a succinct summary of what government thinks of universities, look at their description of non-business, exempt research.

Typically, the research does not give rise to intellectual property that will be exploited

There’s no money there, so who cares.

Here’s my response.  Feel free to adopt or adapt if you want to add your own two-pennorth to the consultation response.

This is an individual’s response and will also be published, with commentary, on my website at http://tiintax.com.  I am a researcher into tax simplification and better regulation but responding in a private capacity.
1.  Your consultation questions do not seem to me to be designed to satisfy any of the “possible reasons to consult” listed in the Cabinet Office guidance.  They are not designed to garner views about the government’s proposed course of action nor to determine or evaluate options as to how to achieve a policy objective but are asking solely for factual information about how much research is commissioned or received in different VAT-able categories.  As such it does not seem to me that this is a “consultation” as it is generally understood.
2.  While I understand that you need factual information about what type and value of research exists in order to test whether there might be unintended consequences of the proposal to abolish the exempt category, a formal written consultation put out onto a website is not a useful way of eliciting this information and nor will it enable you to know whether you have the full picture or simply the responses of people who are sufficiently engaged with government policy-making to know of the existence of the website and spot the consultation.  An email to an appropriate person at each UK university might have been more effective as a simple call for evidence.
3.  You also mention in the consultation document that you are looking at whether there are options to mitigate the impact of the withdrawal, and to look at whether any transitional arrangements are necessary.  However you do not appear to have asked any questions designed to elicit responses on mitigation of the impact, and I cannot see that your questions 8 and 9 are capable of being answered by someone who is not a VAT specialist so will not give you any useful information on the need or otherwise for transitional arrangements.
4.  Your tenth question (as well as being hidden beyond the fold of the final page) also asks for comments about the “administration burdens” of the withdrawal.  I am assuming by this you mean the “administrative burden” as calculated using the standard cost model, ie the deadweight cost of administration of the tax system, but you neither mention nor explain this term elsewhere in the document so that respondents who are not specialists in the field might well fail to understand the question you are asking.  In my admittedly limited experience the administrative burden is likely to be a significant imposition, but I am a self-funded researcher so I can’t assist you in quantifying it.
5.  I am, however, astonished that your impact assessment makes no preliminary estimate, or gives even an overall ball park figure, of the administrative burden that will be imposed.  It is my understanding that you ought to be able to produce this figure by plugging in the legislation (quoted at the end of the consultation document) and the number of bodies affected (presumably all UK universities?) into the Standard Cost Model to give a preliminary estimate of what the burden is now and how you expect it will change as the number of bodies affected changes, so that respondents can see at a glance whether or not the impact is estimated to be significant.   My estimation is that it will have a significant impact on a relatively small number of civil society organisations and I am therefore surprised that you have not gone beyond “minimal but-” in the TIIN.
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Factcheck please?

February 1, 2013

Does anyone know how the announcement of 100 recruits into the HMRC affluence unit turns into a job advert for, um, a grand total of 9 vacancies?  Apparently it’ll be fully operational by April.  What year???

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Consultations in hiding?

January 31, 2013

Did you know the Government Digital Service has a blog?  Well, yes, all right, a better question might be did you know there actually WAS a Government Digital Service

Ahem… well, anyway their latest blog entry describes how they improve their services by using, amongst other things, remote user testing, or in plain English, by getting people to use their pages whilst logged on to some kind of key logging thing that lets them examine how people muddle through finding the stuff they want.  And what did they find?

Users did, however, struggle to find consultations on the site. Users didn’t understand where to start looking, or under what navigation heading it would be listed. This issue was also picked up in the face-to-face lab testing, so it was quickly addressed by the product team and a solution is now undergoing further testing.

(Pause for another round of the “told you so” dance)

Because, in case the Government Digital Service hadn’t already noticed, the House of Lords Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee have already asked for an urgent review of government consultation policy, and suggested (para 11) that a 21st Century government ought to be able to produce a single website listing open consultations in the order in which they close.

Is that the “solution” now undergoing “further testing”?  Somehow, I’m not holding my breath just yet.

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In which I am grumpy and middle aged about the government’s ability to manage the consultation process

January 28, 2013

Anything happening?

Have the Treasury updated the tax tracker since December 7th?

Erm… that’d be a “no“.

Has the government decided to follow the advice of the House of Lords Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee and appoint someone like the NAO to undertake an urgent review of their changes to consultation policy?

Erm… that’d be the people who accused them of “sneaking” their consultations out just before long holidays?  Unlikely.

If they DO decide to review the changes, are they planning on meeting the House of Lords suggested deadline of reporting by Easter?

“We believe that the process needs to be reviewed urgently.  We are calling for the review to be done by an independent organisation such as the National Audit Office, and for the outcome of the review to be published by Easter.”

Erm… given it’s practically the end of January now and Easter is in, what, 61 days (and that’s calendar days, not working days) I leave that question for discussion.  Please use one side of the paper only, and be careful to show your workings in full.

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Where’s Wally?

January 21, 2013

OK then, Christmas well and truly over, New Year thoroughly bedded in, off with the onesies and on with the back-to-work trousers; what’s happening in the wonderful world of tax consultations?

Well, erm, I’m not really sure.  The Treasury’s tax tracker page is a mess, with a heading “Tax consultation tracker (2012)” above a link that looks as if it’s going to be a link to the tracker but actually leads to a previous version of the same web page: Tax updates and consultations tracker 2011

The last actual tax tracker I can find is the one published on 7 December last year (here’s the link) and it shows, erm, none.  Well, none that are actually open, that is.

The HMRC “current consultations” page is a bit better – if you can find it, that is (go to the HMRC main page, search for “consultations” and then scroll down till you find the link that says “current consultations” – under the heading “Details of consultations launched since May 2010 can be found in the following sections”.

(There are two, but they both close in March so we’ll come back to them later)

The Treasury site, actually, is a bit easier to navigate if you were coming at it from no knowledge except a desire to see what consultations were out there.  Go to their front page and there’s a link in the sidebar on the left to “consultations and legislation

So nothing much doing, you might think?

Well, erm… you’d be wrong.  Because the according to this Written Ministerial Statement  the entire 2013 Finance Bill is up for technical consultation until February 6th.  Not “is this a good idea” consultation, you understand, just a “does this work the way we think it does, and by the way can you spot any typos we’ve missed” consultation.  Not that anyone who doesn’t take a policy-wonk interest in the Finance Bill consultation is likely to have the proverbial snowflake’s chance of finding it, however!

Speaking of which… did anyone happen to notice the House of Lords’ Secondary Legislation Scrutiny Committee issued their report and recommendations after their oral evidence session with Oliver Letwin?  And, oh look at paragraph 11 where they urge the government

to introduce, as soon as possible, a single website listing open consultations in the order in which they close (paragraph 54).

And, oh go on, look at paragraph 54.  Which says

54. Wendy Bradley noted that there is no central source of information on what consultations are scheduled, open or coming to an end: “in the 21st century it should be possible for the government to have a single website listing its open consultations in the order in which they close. This would, for example, enable someone going on holiday for a fortnight to be assured that an issue vital to them wasn’t going to be decided in their absence.” We consider that this would be a significant contribution to improving the overall efficiency of the consultation process, and we urge the Government to introduce such a website as soon as possible. It would also provide a useful to tool to Departments to enable them better to co-ordinate consultations on similar subjects.

[Pause for a quiet rendition of the “told you so” dance]