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Cash-strapped hospitals ask for £1.5bn tax rebate

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    Cash-strapped hospitals ask for £1.5bn tax rebate

    Eighty NHS trusts in England have written to local authorities claiming they are eligible for an 80% discount on business rates

    Cash-strapped hospitals are trying to avoid paying taxes and win a £1.5bn rebate in a move that could have a major impact on the finances of local authorities.

    At least 80 NHS trusts in England have written to local authorities claiming they are eligible for an 80% discount on business rates through a loophole in the tax system. The number of applications represents roughly half of the NHS acute trusts in the country.

    The discount would be worth an estimated £250m a year, but the trusts also want it backdated for six years, meaning the government and local authorities, who share business rate revenues, could have to pay £1.5bn.

    The row highlights the financial pressure on the NHS and the tensions between different parts of the public sector as they battle for funding in the wake of the government’s austerity cuts.

    Council representatives said the demands from hospitals are “ridiculous” and warned they will have to increase council tax to cover shortfalls in their funding. (AtW's comment: no, it's ridiculous to expect public hospitals to pay BUSINESS rates in the first place)

    The NHS trusts are claiming they should be classified as charities, meaning they would be eligible for a tax break. Charities enjoy an 80% discount on business rates, which is the equivalent of council tax for non-residential tenants of property. Universities already qualify for relief, as do some private healthcare providers, such as Nuffield Health, which is registered as a charity.

    Source: Cash-strapped hospitals ask for £1.5bn tax rebate | Business | The Guardian

    WTF NHS hospitals even have to pay BUSINESS RATES???

    #2
    Originally posted by AtW View Post
    Eighty NHS trusts in England have written to local authorities claiming they are eligible for an 80% discount on business rates

    Cash-strapped hospitals are trying to avoid paying taxes and win a £1.5bn rebate in a move that could have a major impact on the finances of local authorities.

    At least 80 NHS trusts in England have written to local authorities claiming they are eligible for an 80% discount on business rates through a loophole in the tax system. The number of applications represents roughly half of the NHS acute trusts in the country.

    The discount would be worth an estimated £250m a year, but the trusts also want it backdated for six years, meaning the government and local authorities, who share business rate revenues, could have to pay £1.5bn.

    The row highlights the financial pressure on the NHS and the tensions between different parts of the public sector as they battle for funding in the wake of the government’s austerity cuts.

    Council representatives said the demands from hospitals are “ridiculous” and warned they will have to increase council tax to cover shortfalls in their funding. (AtW's comment: no, it's ridiculous to expect public hospitals to pay BUSINESS rates in the first place)

    The NHS trusts are claiming they should be classified as charities, meaning they would be eligible for a tax break. Charities enjoy an 80% discount on business rates, which is the equivalent of council tax for non-residential tenants of property. Universities already qualify for relief, as do some private healthcare providers, such as Nuffield Health, which is registered as a charity.

    Source: Cash-strapped hospitals ask for £1.5bn tax rebate | Business | The Guardian

    WTF NHS hospitals even have to pay BUSINESS RATES???
    The black hole of NHS finances is on the March
    Let us not forget EU open doors immigration benefits IT contractors more than anyone

    Comment


      #3
      NHS Hospitals pay Business Rates????? Registered charities don't. That's why landlords put charity shops in empty properties, who then buy new gear and put the local gift shops out of business.


      What a crock!!!
      What happens in General, stays in General.
      You know what they say about assumptions!

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by AtW View Post
        WTF NHS hospitals even have to pay BUSINESS RATES???
        The cash just circulates, if NHS properties were exempted the funding gap to councils would only have to be filled by central government.

        The NHS will also pay taxes such as VAT, employers NIC, land fill tax etc.
        "The budget should be balanced, the Treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed lest Rome become bankrupt. People must again learn to work, instead of living on public assistance." Cicero

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by DodgyAgent View Post
          The black hole of NHS finances is on the March
          How many contractors have you supplied to the NHS?

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Waldorf View Post
            The NHS will also pay taxes such as VAT, employers NIC, land fill tax etc.
            What BUSINESS rates got to do with NHS (not private) hospitals???

            Comment


              #7
              btw, there should NOT even be such a thing as "business rates" - businesses provide jobs and pay many other taxes, that's more than enough.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by AtW View Post
                btw, there should NOT even be such a thing as "business rates" - businesses provide jobs and pay many other taxes, that's more than enough.

                Please forward this memo to Starbucks, Amazon & Google.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by clearedforlanding View Post
                  Please forward this memo to Starbucks, Amazon & Google.
                  They pay very little business rates already, it's small businesses on High Street that get destroyed by crazy rates - pubs, restaurants etc.

                  Business rates should not exist - VAT should be 25% of which, say 5% goes to local authority.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by AtW View Post
                    They pay very little business rates already, it's small businesses on High Street that get destroyed by crazy rates - pubs, restaurants etc.

                    Business rates should not exist - VAT should be 25% of which, say 5% goes to local authority.
                    So the USA?

                    Comment

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