With the predictable action of the Revenue now changing the law resulting from their defeat in the House of Lords over Arctic, where do the esteemed panel see this all ending? I'll clarify.
I am not an accountant, so I secure the services of one. By following their advice to legally structure my practices in the most tax efficient manner, I feel that these practices can be branded with the now electorate-friendly term of "tax avoidance" at any time. I think the government is keen to spin this term into the same arena as "tax evasion" in terms of the public perception. In the same way that 4x4 owners may now feel they are somewhat outcast and have to defend their choice of vehicle, any previous-legal but currently frowned upon tax avoidance mechanisms seem to almost carry the same social stigma.
I'm not talking about using schemes the disclosure rules introduced in 2004 were introduced to catch; these are accountancy-recommended practices. I would expect no area of tax avoidance to be exempt from scrutiny. The use of ESC16 is surely to be tightened soon and maybe inheritance tax avoidance is next? Let's face it, they're all legal practices at the moment, but heaven help anyone who follows their accountant's advice; you risk feeling like a criminal for your trouble.
I am not an accountant, so I secure the services of one. By following their advice to legally structure my practices in the most tax efficient manner, I feel that these practices can be branded with the now electorate-friendly term of "tax avoidance" at any time. I think the government is keen to spin this term into the same arena as "tax evasion" in terms of the public perception. In the same way that 4x4 owners may now feel they are somewhat outcast and have to defend their choice of vehicle, any previous-legal but currently frowned upon tax avoidance mechanisms seem to almost carry the same social stigma.
I'm not talking about using schemes the disclosure rules introduced in 2004 were introduced to catch; these are accountancy-recommended practices. I would expect no area of tax avoidance to be exempt from scrutiny. The use of ESC16 is surely to be tightened soon and maybe inheritance tax avoidance is next? Let's face it, they're all legal practices at the moment, but heaven help anyone who follows their accountant's advice; you risk feeling like a criminal for your trouble.
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