Originally posted by minestrone
View Post
- Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
- Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!
The BN66 thread has broken a record!
Collapse
X
Collapse
-
-
If you guys insist on feeding the troll, please confine your contribution to a small square of stale bread.+50 Xeno Geek Points
Come back Toolpusher, scotspine, Voodooflux.Pogle
As for the rest of you - DILLIGAF
Purveyor of fine quality smut since 2005
CUK Olympic University Challenge Champions 2010/2012Comment
-
Originally posted by NickFitz View PostThe judge appears to disagree with you, having accepted that Padmore does not apply. It seems that HMRC also disagree with you, as they have shifted their arguments away from trying to claim that Padmore applies to a more general argument that they can, retrospectively, do anything they damn well please, and to hell with what rules there might or might not have been.
If nobody on this site had ever heard of this scheme and then the story broke that Doctors had been doing it for years and did not pay any tax you would all be going bonkers.
People who are being chased have lost their objectivity on the subject, to them it is about being hit by a masssive bill from hector, to the rest of us it is a moral case, should someone who lives and works in the UK get to launder money out and then in the country and not pay any tax on it.
You should have paid it in the first place I say.Comment
-
Originally posted by minestrone View PostPeople who are being chased have lost their objectivity on the subject, to them it is about being hit by a masssive bill from hector, to the rest of us it is a moral case, should someone who lives and works in the UK get to launder money out and then in the country and not pay any tax on it.
You should have paid it in the first place I say.
Maybe they should have paid the tax in the first place, I don't support the tax planning mechanism that they used, however this is where my views differ from yours.
It is perfectly reasonable that a UK citizen is entitled to order their tax affairs in line with current UK law at the time of the income and that's an overriding moral concern.
While there's absolutely no doubt that these folks exploited a tax loophole that's been a factor in every tax regime throughout history. People have always done their best to pay as little tax as they can legally get away with, to believe otherwise is naive to say the least.
I'm certain that you would be totally opposed to retrospective legislation that attempted to force you to pay Income Tax, NI's, penalties and interest on the money you've taken from your business in dividends.
As I've said before I do not support the tax planning approach that these people have used, but I am completely opposed to HMG and HMRC attempting to enact and enforce retrospective law.
It is a basic right that a person can have reasonable certainty that their behaviour is legal. For a government to attempt to retrospectively punish past activity because they've cottoned onto the fact that their past law was flawed is morally repugnant and goes completely against any sense of natural justice.
It is up to HMG to draft clear tax law that isn't open to interpretation, it is not the moral responsibility of a UK taxpayer to pay more than they absolutely have to.Comment
-
Originally posted by TykeMerc View PostIf you feel so morally outraged that these people have avoided tax that could have been paid how can you negotiate the moral maze of avoiding Income Tax and National Insurance by paying yourself partially in dividends when you could take it all as salary? Surely you're exploiting a tax loophole too?
Maybe they should have paid the tax in the first place, I don't support the tax planning mechanism that they used, however this is where my views differ from yours.
It is perfectly reasonable that a UK citizen is entitled to order their tax affairs in line with current UK law at the time of the income and that's an overriding moral concern.
While there's absolutely no doubt that these folks exploited a tax loophole that's been a factor in every tax regime throughout history. People have always done their best to pay as little tax as they can legally get away with, to believe otherwise is naive to say the least.
I'm certain that you would be totally opposed to retrospective legislation that attempted to force you to pay Income Tax, NI's, penalties and interest on the money you've taken from your business in dividends.
As I've said before I do not support the tax planning approach that these people have used, but I am completely opposed to HMG and HMRC attempting to enact and enforce retrospective law.
It is a basic right that a person can have reasonable certainty that their behaviour is legal. For a government to attempt to retrospectively punish past activity because they've cottoned onto the fact that their past law was flawed is morally repugnant and goes completely against any sense of natural justice.
It is up to HMG to draft clear tax law that isn't open to interpretation, it is not the moral responsibility of a UK taxpayer to pay more than they absolutely have to.
ALso the revenue can cast up years back anyway outwith IR35 and BN66. BN66 was never a loophole, it was just 100% tax avoidance and as I said if it was the public sector doing it you would all be going fruitloop, that is why I do not accept the revenue are 'morally repugnant' or 'against any sense of natural justice'(???).
People should have to pay their fare share and paying nothing for years then bleating on about it when you get called for it is pretty rich. You take the chances and you take the risks.Comment
-
Originally posted by minestrone View PostI dont know why people keep going on about IR35, the 2 rules are a million miles away, it's a bit like defending a GBH charge on the basis that you seen a boxing match on the TV earlier and the police never got involved. One varies which level and type of tax you pay the other is just not paying any tax by nothing more than international money laundering.
ALso the revenue can cast up years back anyway outwith IR35 and BN66. BN66 was never a loophole, it was just 100% tax avoidance and as I said if it was the public sector doing it you would all be going fruitloop, that is why I do not accept the revenue are 'morally repugnant' or 'against any sense of natural justice'(???).
People should have to pay their fare share and paying nothing for years then bleating on about it when you get called for it is pretty rich. You take the chances and you take the risks.
At the time when the people affected by BN66 were using their tax avoidance strategy, that strategy wasn't (arguably) covered by legislation to tax their income in what you have called a "fare" (I prefer fair, but what the hell) way.
HMG and HMRC as their enforcement arm have tried to assert that there was a relevant tax law, but they took many years to do it despite the scheme being declared up front to HMRC and have made a far from solid case. The case is now being tested in court.
I have absolutely no issue with HMG issuing new tax law that takes effect at a future date, but I find it deeply offensive that they have attempted to enact retrospection which is contrary not only to natural justice, but also to UK precedent.
Purely hypothetically how content would you be if HMG passed a retrospective law that taxed all UK football fans at 75% of their lifetime income simply for boring the rest of the planet to death? Would that be fair?
You're a complete hypocrite if you're happy to use tax avoidance measures of any kind and would later object if those measures were retrospectively changed so that you were forced to pay additional tax, penalties and interest.
Incidentally I am in no way financially affected by the BN66 case as I have never used the tax planning measures they used. I am however very concerned that if the principle of retrospection isn't defeated then it will be employed time and time again as a way to cover up for muppetry in HMG law making.Comment
-
Originally posted by TykeMerc View Post<snip>
Using low salary and dividends is tax avoidance, IR35 attempts to correct the disparity by ensuring that everyone pays their 'fair share'.
I'm not involved in the MP scheme but it seems to me that those folks found a way of reducing their tax bill even further.
Same principle. If the government decided that IR35 applied to everyone in 'closed companies' who receive dividends, I'm sure you, like me, would be up in arms if they declared that's what they had meant all along and applied it retrospectively.
Well that's how I see it.Comment
-
Originally posted by TykeMerc View PostIf you feel so morally outraged that these people have avoided tax that could have been paid how can you negotiate the moral maze of avoiding Income Tax and National Insurance by paying yourself partially in dividends when you could take it all as salary? Surely you're exploiting a tax loophole too?
Maybe they should have paid the tax in the first place, I don't support the tax planning mechanism that they used, however this is where my views differ from yours.
It is perfectly reasonable that a UK citizen is entitled to order their tax affairs in line with current UK law at the time of the income and that's an overriding moral concern.
While there's absolutely no doubt that these folks exploited a tax loophole that's been a factor in every tax regime throughout history. People have always done their best to pay as little tax as they can legally get away with, to believe otherwise is naive to say the least.
I'm certain that you would be totally opposed to retrospective legislation that attempted to force you to pay Income Tax, NI's, penalties and interest on the money you've taken from your business in dividends.
As I've said before I do not support the tax planning approach that these people have used, but I am completely opposed to HMG and HMRC attempting to enact and enforce retrospective law.
It is a basic right that a person can have reasonable certainty that their behaviour is legal. For a government to attempt to retrospectively punish past activity because they've cottoned onto the fact that their past law was flawed is morally repugnant and goes completely against any sense of natural justice.
It is up to HMG to draft clear tax law that isn't open to interpretation, it is not the moral responsibility of a UK taxpayer to pay more than they absolutely have to.
Perfectly put. I've never subscribed to the "Mont Pellier" scheme but I fully agree that retrospective taxation where any government is allowed to change the rules in the past should be illegal. Where will it stop if it is allowed to continue ? Will they decide to tax us 26p in the pound instead of 25p from years 1987 to 2010, just because HMRC are "clarifying" what tax should have been back then.
This has to be stopped right now. Enough is enough.Last edited by eliquant; 22 January 2010, 22:54.Comment
-
Originally posted by minestrone View PostI am sorry but I do not fall for these "yes, I am in trouble but if you don't support me now mark my words YOU WILL BE NEXT " manipulation devices. Your point is as daft as the smokers who claimed that once they banned smoking in pubs they would ban drinking in them as well.
I am perfectly happy to argue my position over IR35 and I know that all my money has been taxed at some level, it is on another scale to take your earnings out of the country and bring them back in to escape all taxation which is what the BN66 brigade effectively did. They were fools to think they could get away with it.
I worked with someone that was with the MontP scheme a couple of years ago. He was trying to get me interested in it, but the way he explained it was basically you don't pay tax here, you pay it in the Isle of Man and the magic is in the trust scheme and the Double Taxation treaty. When I asked him how on earth he reckoned that when he lives and works in the UK he thinks he's going to get away with putting it through the IoM, he didn't really have an answer.
In my eye's it's not avoidance it's evasion, pure and simple. I run a limited company and I do my hardest to justify the fact that I consider myself a consultancy and not an employee. I have a web presence and I do odd tech stuff at cost to put other clients through my books. I have a business bank account and make sure that any expenditure from that can be justified as a company expense. I pay myself a reasonable salary and pay tax and NI offset against that reasonable salary. I honestly believe I could stand up in front of a tax commissioner and argue the fact that I provide a service to my clients. If anyone on that type of scheme could stand up and argue they shouldn't pay tax because they don't 'work' in the UK then I'd call them either a fool or a liar.
People bleating about their Human Rights being abused take the biscuit. I take no satisfaction in anyone being hounded by the taxman, but in my opinion it's their own greed that's got them in this mess and now they're bleating about how unfair it is.
An old saying:
'You made your bed, now you sleep in it'"I hope Celtic realise that, if their team is good enough, they will win. If they're not good enough, they'll not win - and they can't look at anybody else, whether it is referees or any other influence." - Walter Smith
On them! On them! They fail!Comment
-
Originally posted by BrilloPad View PostContractors get their kicked. Mal has a go at them. And becomes poster of the year via loads of sockpuppets.
Its a strange place cuk. As a loon I feel right at home here.
And please qualify your statement. BN66 does not affect contractors, it affects a small subset of contractors who decided to go that route."I hope Celtic realise that, if their team is good enough, they will win. If they're not good enough, they'll not win - and they can't look at anybody else, whether it is referees or any other influence." - Walter Smith
On them! On them! They fail!Comment
- Home
- News & Features
- First Timers
- IR35 / S660 / BN66
- Employee Benefit Trusts
- Agency Workers Regulations
- MSC Legislation
- Limited Companies
- Dividends
- Umbrella Company
- VAT / Flat Rate VAT
- Job News & Guides
- Money News & Guides
- Guide to Contracts
- Successful Contracting
- Contracting Overseas
- Contractor Calculators
- MVL
- Contractor Expenses
Advertisers
Contractor Services
CUK News
- Five tax return mistakes contractors will make any day now… Jan 9 09:27
- Experts you can trust to deliver UK and global solutions tailored to your needs! Jan 8 15:10
- Business & Personal Protection for Contractors Jan 8 13:58
- ‘Four interest rate cuts in 2025’ not echoed by contractor advisers Jan 8 08:24
- ‘Why Should We Hire You?’ How to answer as an IT contractor Jan 7 09:30
- Even IT contractors connect with 'New Year, New Job.' But… Jan 6 09:28
- Which IT contractor skills will be top five in 2025? Jan 2 09:08
- Secondary NI threshold sinking to £5,000: a limited company director’s explainer Dec 24 09:51
- Reeves sets Spring Statement 2025 for March 26th Dec 23 09:18
- Spot the hidden contractor Dec 20 10:43
Comment