Last month, 2 months before it was due, I filed my tax return for tax year 06-07. I did this online and the calculation was immediately available, and I owed 5K tax, as I had expected. I paid this promptly like the good taxpayer I am.
This week I received a letter from Hector saying that he had received the 5K for 06-07 and that I owe 2.5K for 07-08, due on 31st January. I rang the number on the letter and spoke to hector’s minion somewhere north of Hadrian’s wall. I said that as we were still in the 07-08 tax year that I do not know how much my liability for this year is going to be. She said that the amount due is 50% of an estimate of next year’s liability based on the previous one; and that this tax is due. I said that when I budgeted for the year, that I included the amount of tax I expected to pay for 06-07 and not that plus 50%.
She said that I can reduce the estimate of next year’s liability, however if I do that and then it is subsequently higher, that hector will charge me interest on the difference between the estimate and what I actually have to pay, at an interest rate of 8%. I asked how this is justified at all, and how they can subsequently charge 8% when the BOE base rate is at 5.5%. At which point I got the age old “I don’t make the rules” statement.
Anyone else think that this is a feccing liberty? Another way that Gordon Brown makes life for small business owners difficult. Thanks Gord.
This week I received a letter from Hector saying that he had received the 5K for 06-07 and that I owe 2.5K for 07-08, due on 31st January. I rang the number on the letter and spoke to hector’s minion somewhere north of Hadrian’s wall. I said that as we were still in the 07-08 tax year that I do not know how much my liability for this year is going to be. She said that the amount due is 50% of an estimate of next year’s liability based on the previous one; and that this tax is due. I said that when I budgeted for the year, that I included the amount of tax I expected to pay for 06-07 and not that plus 50%.
She said that I can reduce the estimate of next year’s liability, however if I do that and then it is subsequently higher, that hector will charge me interest on the difference between the estimate and what I actually have to pay, at an interest rate of 8%. I asked how this is justified at all, and how they can subsequently charge 8% when the BOE base rate is at 5.5%. At which point I got the age old “I don’t make the rules” statement.
Anyone else think that this is a feccing liberty? Another way that Gordon Brown makes life for small business owners difficult. Thanks Gord.
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