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    Originally posted by Finalwhistle View Post
    Slightly disappointed to have missed this, especially being a WTT client. I must have missed the email invitation...
    I'm sorry you missed it.

    It's available as a recording on the Big Group forum, along with a lot of papers backing it up.

    We did send an email on each of the 4 previous Fridays and it was advertised here two/three times.

    Perhaps you have set your email to put our material into spam?
    Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.

    (No, me neither).

    Comment


      Originally posted by webberg View Post
      I'm sorry you missed it.

      It's available as a recording on the Big Group forum, along with a lot of papers backing it up.

      We did send an email on each of the 4 previous Fridays and it was advertised here two/three times.

      Perhaps you have set your email to put our material into spam?

      Graham, I too am a WTT client currently waiting for settlement figures via CLSO2 and so not in Big Group and not in receipt of an invite. I wouldn't have been able to attend to be honest (with it being in London) but wondered if any of the material may have been useful or informative for those choosing settlement. If settlement via CLSO2 is way more than the figures presented to HMRC are there options to join Big Group?

      Many thanks
      (PS: Don't think I have any PM rights currently)

      Comment


        Originally posted by 1887wwfc View Post
        Graham, I too am a WTT client currently waiting for settlement figures via CLSO2 and so not in Big Group and not in receipt of an invite. I wouldn't have been able to attend to be honest (with it being in London) but wondered if any of the material may have been useful or informative for those choosing settlement. If settlement via CLSO2 is way more than the figures presented to HMRC are there options to join Big Group?

        Many thanks
        (PS: Don't think I have any PM rights currently)
        email us and we'll send the slides and narrative.
        Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.

        (No, me neither).

        Comment


          We put this is a rival forum today

          Loan charge, review and options



          I have previously acknowledged the work of LCAG in securing the review of the loan charge, now due to be published no later than 30th March 2019. It was a great effort.

          It is now important that the good work done to date is not wasted and that the Government (especially HM Treasury) is properly held to account and is not allowed use the same old excuses and flawed logic that saw the charge introduced, as reason to keep it. We (WTT Consulting) will be producing a dossier of the sort of sound bites used by Messrs. Hammond, Stride, Glen and others, and the appropriate responses. This we will publish on our website and public fora, but it will also be available upon request. Go to [email protected] for a free copy.

          All contractors now need to be thinking about the next stages should the review conclude that the loan charge should be abolished, time limited or remain in place. This thinking also needs to consider the wider HMRC campaign against the contracting sector.

          The "big picture" elements I have included below. I will in due course develop each one to provide depth and more information.

          Let's start with good news and assume that the loan charge is consigned to be a poorly remembered nightmare. What then?

          Well HMRC consider that the loans paid to contractors from 2000 to date, are taxable income. They claim - and it's repeated by Stride - that they have a series of victories against such schemes "proving" that the income is taxable. Do they?

          The one most often cited is the Supreme Court decision in the "Rangers" case. Here the football club paid players and executives via an EBT. Moreover the EBT was essentially run and directed by the football club - the trustee was a rubber stamp. Nonetheless, the Court held that the loans were taxable income. Sadly for HMRC, the Court also said that the employer was liable. Perfect - why then is HMRC taking NO ACTION they can prove against employers? Instead, HMRC is fond of conflating EBT and contractor loan schemes for ALL PURPOSE except the collection of tax from those found liable.

          HMRC does have victories against EBT schemes but some of these considered the deductions claimed by employers, some the use of the funds, some the mechanisms used to pass value. Victories against a straightforward contractor loan scheme? No.

          HMRC persuaded John Glen MP to tell a Commons debate that they had a victory against a contractor loan scheme. We were intrigued and enquired via a FOI request. It seems that the "victory" was in a case taken to decide if a tax avoidance scheme should have been disclosed. Moreover a scheme that used what might be called a "difference engine" to generate an economic and tax result. About as far removed from a loan scheme as you can imagine.

          We can find no other "victories".

          We conclude therefore that to make good the oft repeated claim that such schemes were always "defective" (whatever that means), a case will need to be taken.

          We are aware that one such is itching to go ahead but has been frustrated by HMRC delaying tactics. We caution HMRC here that such moves are increasingly coming to the attention of Judges who disapprove and who show every sign of holding the agency to higher (and appropriate) standards.

          Other cases (usually backed by those connected to various schemes) are less certain to go ahead. There are a number of reasons why they may not, but one is that HMRC is very adept at applying pressure, so much so that many individuals, faced with uncertainty over tax, timing and costs, chose to leave a group for the sake of their own sanity and their families health.

          Our own client group was formed to find a reasoned final position, recognising the faults and actions of all the parties in the equation. We have not failed, but being realistic, we are now gearing for a challenge in Court, backed by several thousand people.

          Tomorrow I'll consider the impact should the loan charge be restricted by time, including our view on a number of "solutions" available in the market to avoid the charge.

          In the meantime, all contractors need to be aware that the loan charge review, whilst a step in the right direction, is not the end of the process.

          Beware the wounded animal that is HMT/HMRC because they are unpredictable.
          Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.

          (No, me neither).

          Comment


            Originally posted by webberg View Post
            Loan charge, review and options



            I have previously acknowledged the work of LCAG in securing the review of the loan charge, now due to be published no later than 30th March 2019. It was a great effort.

            It is now important that the good work done to date is not wasted and that the Government (especially HM Treasury) is properly held to account and is not allowed use the same old excuses and flawed logic that saw the charge introduced, as reason to keep it. We (WTT Consulting) will be producing a dossier of the sort of sound bites used by Messrs. Hammond, Stride, Glen and others, and the appropriate responses. This we will publish on our website and public fora, but it will also be available upon request. Go to [email protected] for a free copy.

            All contractors now need to be thinking about the next stages should the review conclude that the loan charge should be abolished, time limited or remain in place. This thinking also needs to consider the wider HMRC campaign against the contracting sector.

            The "big picture" elements I have included below. I will in due course develop each one to provide depth and more information.

            Let's start with good news and assume that the loan charge is consigned to be a poorly remembered nightmare. What then?

            Well HMRC consider that the loans paid to contractors from 2000 to date, are taxable income. They claim - and it's repeated by Stride - that they have a series of victories against such schemes "proving" that the income is taxable. Do they?

            The one most often cited is the Supreme Court decision in the "Rangers" case. Here the football club paid players and executives via an EBT. Moreover the EBT was essentially run and directed by the football club - the trustee was a rubber stamp. Nonetheless, the Court held that the loans were taxable income. Sadly for HMRC, the Court also said that the employer was liable. Perfect - why then is HMRC taking NO ACTION they can prove against employers? Instead, HMRC is fond of conflating EBT and contractor loan schemes for ALL PURPOSE except the collection of tax from those found liable.

            HMRC does have victories against EBT schemes but some of these considered the deductions claimed by employers, some the use of the funds, some the mechanisms used to pass value. Victories against a straightforward contractor loan scheme? No.

            HMRC persuaded John Glen MP to tell a Commons debate that they had a victory against a contractor loan scheme. We were intrigued and enquired via a FOI request. It seems that the "victory" was in a case taken to decide if a tax avoidance scheme should have been disclosed. Moreover a scheme that used what might be called a "difference engine" to generate an economic and tax result. About as far removed from a loan scheme as you can imagine.

            We can find no other "victories".

            We conclude therefore that to make good the oft repeated claim that such schemes were always "defective" (whatever that means), a case will need to be taken.

            We are aware that one such is itching to go ahead but has been frustrated by HMRC delaying tactics. We caution HMRC here that such moves are increasingly coming to the attention of Judges who disapprove and who show every sign of holding the agency to higher (and appropriate) standards.

            Other cases (usually backed by those connected to various schemes) are less certain to go ahead. There are a number of reasons why they may not, but one is that HMRC is very adept at applying pressure, so much so that many individuals, faced with uncertainty over tax, timing and costs, chose to leave a group for the sake of their own sanity and their families health.

            Our own client group was formed to find a reasoned final position, recognising the faults and actions of all the parties in the equation. We have not failed, but being realistic, we are now gearing for a challenge in Court, backed by several thousand people.

            Tomorrow I'll consider the impact should the loan charge be restricted by time, including our view on a number of "solutions" available in the market to avoid the charge.

            In the meantime, all contractors need to be aware that the loan charge review, whilst a step in the right direction, is not the end of the process.

            Beware the wounded animal that is HMT/HMRC because they are unpredictable.
            As evidence by their recent tweet propaganda.

            Comment


              Originally posted by webberg View Post
              why then is HMRC taking NO ACTION they can prove against employers?
              For a bit of balance, they are. More than 90% of the £650 million paid in settlements since March 2016 has come from employers.

              Comment


                Originally posted by Iliketax View Post
                For a bit of balance, they are. More than 90% of the £650 million paid in settlements since March 2016 has come from employers.
                I know that is what HMRC have said, a lot of doubt about what has been included/inflated to get to that number. Employer may not mean employer in the usual sense. HMRC throw out a lot of figures for publicity but can't or won't reveal their working in FOIs

                Comment


                  Originally posted by dammit chloe View Post
                  Employer may not mean employer in the usual sense.
                  I don't know what that means.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by Iliketax View Post
                    I don't know what that means.
                    It means that most people will assume the employer, in this context, means the umbrella company that ran the loan scheme and employed the contractor. Little action has been taken on that part.

                    My understanding is that there were bigger, more artificial setups, such as some used internally by the big banks that may have settled but this is different to an umbrella/employer situation. These may have been used to fluff the figures.

                    It is certainly true that HMRC are not forthcoming with supporting evidence on this or pretty much any of the "facts" they like to headline with.

                    Just what I have read here and elsewhere.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by dammit chloe View Post
                      It means that most people will assume the employer, in this context, means the umbrella company that ran the loan scheme and employed the contractor.
                      Ah, I had just assumed that "employer" meant "employer".

                      Originally posted by dammit chloe View Post
                      My understanding is that there were bigger, more artificial setups, such as some used internally by the big banks that may have settled but this is different to an umbrella/employer situation.
                      My experience is that the contractor loan schemes are way, way more artificial. The stuff that larger employers did was plain vanilla EBT loan schemes before December 2010. Banks stopped the year before. They (larger employers) didn't do any of that super artificial stuff to try to get around the disguised remuneration rules that was done afterwards. Some smaller employers, especially OMBs, tried to do some very artificial stuff after 2010, some of it on a par with the contractor schemes. But it would have been rare for larger employers. And as I say, banks wouldn't have done loan schemes after 2009.

                      Originally posted by dammit chloe View Post
                      These may have been used to fluff the figures.
                      Perhaps. Employers who put money into trust, but where not all the money was taken out by way of loan, would have wanted to settle before the withdrawal of para 59 and so that may distort the numbers. While those settlements would have been for DR reasons, they wouldn't necessarily have been because of the loan charge.

                      Comment

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