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IR35 Implication

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    #11
    Originally posted by ZoppZ
    I understood 1st part of the agrument but not the second. I can't find the funding without giving away best part of my company so I go out, earn money, invest it, work 12-14 hours per day... only to find that I might be taxed... UNFAIR .

    There is got be way around this. How can I show that I am investing and reap the long term benefits? Any ideas, hints, tips welcome.
    The Governemt is saying that you can't do this.

    I.e. you can't divert the tax free earnings from an 'employment' to fund another venture and hence create the opportunity to save some tax if the venture goes tits up (because the lost money would have been paid in tax anyway) or save some tax if it is successful (because the tax regiem is more friendly towards the 'venture' than employment).

    You may not like this, but I don't see how you can argue that its unfair, it's the same for everyone (except that 99.9% of the population don't want to do it).

    If you need funds to complete a venture, you are expected to find someone other than the revenue to take the risk with you.

    tim

    Comment


      #12
      Originally posted by tim123
      The Governemt is saying that you can't do this.

      I.e. you can't divert the tax free earnings from an 'employment' to fund another venture and hence create the opportunity to save some tax if the venture goes tits up (because the lost money would have been paid in tax anyway) or save some tax if it is successful (because the tax regiem is more friendly towards the 'venture' than employment).

      You may not like this, but I don't see how you can argue that its unfair, it's the same for everyone (except that 99.9% of the population don't want to do it).

      If you need funds to complete a venture, you are expected to find someone other than the revenue to take the risk with you.

      tim

      Tim - thanks for puting it in Black & White so clearly.

      I still think it is UNFAIR and fall into "unreasonable" Terms & Conditions (The Law is an Ass) category.

      ZoppZ
      ZoppZ

      Comment


        #13
        I.e. you can't divert the tax free earnings from an 'employment' to fund another venture and hence create the opportunity to save some tax if the venture goes tits up (because the lost money would have been paid in tax anyway) or save some tax if it is successful (because the tax regiem is more friendly towards the 'venture' than employment).

        You may not like this, but I don't see how you can argue that its unfair, it's the same for everyone (except that 99.9% of the population don't want to do it).
        Well not quite. The government does allow "diverting the tax free earnings from an 'employment' to fund another venture" -

        http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/3713940.stm

        http://www.hoodlessbrennan.com/artic...rivate-equity/

        and hence create the opportunity to save some tax if the venture goes tits up
        A quick search will show that a _VERY_ large number of these ventures fail.

        So what is a "small business" suppposed to do that can't attract VCT/private equity fund or doesn't want to attract private fund yet :-(

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by kingshuk
          So what is a "small business" suppposed to do that can't attract VCT/private equity fund or doesn't want to attract private fund yet :-(
          borrow against the house, like (almost) everyone else staring a business does.

          tim

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            #15
            borrow against the house
            Hmmm... its probably a sign of how long the housing boom had been going on when so many assume that everyone else owns a house.

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by tim123
              borrow against the house, like (almost) everyone else staring a business does.

              tim
              I have already borrowed against house...enterprising..flexible..I am. The fact is this government is willing to tax everything inlcuding itself: the case of Olympic 2012 funding. If things are as black & white as Tim suggests, the regime in the country has become 'Carry On Henry' type regime - Tax on Sex is on its way!

              ZoppZ
              ZoppZ

              Comment


                #17
                If things are as black & white as Tim suggests...
                Black and white it certainly isn't.

                There are numerous ways of not paying tax legally in this country if the money involved is large enough.

                For example -

                corporate profits as a share of GDP have increased on average from 21.5% to 22.5% since 1999, while the proportion paid in corporation tax has fallen from 15% to 14.1%. As a result, corporation tax paid as a proportion of GDP has been almost exactly fixed at 3.2% over this period.
                from http://business.guardian.co.uk/story/0,,1892389,00.html

                "Non-domiciled tax rule" is used not only by the super wealthy any more but by City traders and bankers quite regularly. http://money.guardian.co.uk/tax/stor...755287,00.html

                Earlier post about Venture Capital Trust Funding is another area where large tax advantages are available if you have serious amount of money you would like to bet (minimum investmnet usually starts from GBP250K to 500K).

                Don't get me wrong. I am not for increasing tax. Neither do I envy other people their money. My rant is about lack of level playing field. Very high earners and big businesses have a definite advantage in this country that small startups don't seem to enjoy.

                Comment


                  #18
                  Originally posted by kingshuk
                  Black and white it certainly isn't.

                  Don't get me wrong. I am not for increasing tax. Neither do I envy other people their money. My rant is about lack of level playing field. Very high earners and big businesses have a definite advantage in this country that small startups don't seem to enjoy.
                  I agree with you entirely.

                  ZoppZ
                  ZoppZ

                  Comment


                    #19
                    I'm not saying that it's black and white, my comment was meant to be a tongue in cheek example rather than a hard and fast rule.

                    There are other ways of getting money to fund a venture, but what the Revenue are saying is that it doesn't come from us. Or more to the point they are saying, you don't just decide to take it from us.

                    The fact of the matter is, that if you have an idea for a venture that requires funding, the money has to come from some third party, somehow. There are ways that you can get money from HMG in this situation, but you have to ask for it properly not just take it.

                    If you have a venture that require funds, you have to pitch for the money properly, with business plans, presentations to the right people etc.

                    If you have a venture that you can't fund, it's not because the money isn't available, it's either because the venture isn't viable or because you haven't pitched it properly.

                    Look at the dross that is pitched on Dragon's Den (the ones that get the 30 second slots, not the 10 minute slots). Do you really think that these people should be allowed to dip into their tax money to fund their (often) stupid ideas.

                    tim

                    Comment


                      #20
                      I think we are moving away from the real issues; the "IR35".

                      In my case, I choose to use most of contrating income to fund the development of business; NOT to pay large dividends, NOT to pay huge salary or NOT to pay my wife a salary. Any salary or dividends I take is taxed. The day I sell my software to someone I will stop contracing and may even employ other people. Other businesses are allowed to reinvest their profits without being penalised and considered TAX CONs. IR35 is blanket instrument that deters people like to me create wealth by taking risks.

                      The LAW is an ASS.
                      ZoppZ

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