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    #71
    Originally posted by Fred Bloggs View Post
    Sorry I can' t be exact. But I think the incentive to go either Ltd Co or scheme user was considerable?
    The incentive to join a scheme HAD TO BE very considerable to all other options, certainly Ltd even after service fees were taken into account.

    Otherwise very few people would bother to take obvious extra risks and strange things like loans.

    Comment


      #72
      Originally posted by AtW View Post
      Actions speak louder than words.

      Who'd join a (registered) tax avoidance scheme and what would be their primary motivation?



      No, you accept their VERSION OF EVENTS, which happens to suit you commercially.

      You have no objective to find the truth - you are defending their position (however faulty it is) because it's your business.
      Registered tax avoidance schemes included property schemes that are enshrined in the statute book and clearly intended by Parliament. The DOTAS rules were written to be as wide as possible and many investment and other structures were registered as a safety first option.

      I accept a "version of events" that I hear consistently from many different sources. That is called believing the evidence.

      I agree it suits me commercially that most clients can argue that tax was not their MAIN motivation. I did however arrive at that conclusion a long time before my business started and tested the evidence BEFORE launching into the commercial operation. Your suggestion that I modelled a business around a lie (moreover a lie that was repeated by literally hundreds of people who probably didn't know each other) is perhaps more indicative of your wish to make good a belief that as far as I can see has no empirical evidence.

      As has been observed by others in this thread, the evidence is out there. I'm clearly not going to change the view you have arrived at. Ultimately the arbiter will not be me or you of course, but the relevant authorities. I think therefore that I'll reserve my energies for them rather than continue a fruitless debate here.

      Happy to do so via PM if you wish, but I think the other readers here have had enough.
      Best Forum Adviser & Forum Personality of the Year 2018.

      (No, me neither).

      Comment


        #73
        The early schemes around 2001/2 were definitely IR35 motivated. Montpelier even named their scheme the "IR35 scheme".

        Most people I know switched back to Ltd, after a couple of years or so, when it became clear that IR35 was pretty toothless.

        Comment


          #74
          Originally posted by webberg View Post
          I agree it suits me commercially that most clients can argue that tax was not their MAIN motivation. I did however arrive at that conclusion a long time before my business started and tested the evidence BEFORE launching into the commercial operation. Your suggestion that I modelled a business around a lie (moreover a lie that was repeated by literally hundreds of people who probably didn't know each other) is perhaps more indicative of your wish to make good a belief that as far as I can see has no empirical evidence.
          Why does it matter if your clients had tax avoidance as primary motivation? Tax avoidance is legal, isn't it?

          People who go to a lawyer for defense would obviously say they are innocent or at least try to present their situation in most favorable light, that's expected - my point was that your job is defending them, rather than establishing the truth and then deciding whether to take their case or not, nobody expects that from a lawyer, but the point is that your view is biased towards your clients because it's your job to defend them.

          Originally posted by webberg View Post
          I think therefore that I'll reserve my energies for them rather than continue a fruitless debate here.
          Sure, good luck.

          Comment


            #75
            Originally posted by AtW View Post
            HMRC is very aggressive and pretty successful at dealing with those schemes.
            Very aggressive towards the clients and former clients? yes.
            Aggressive towards the promoters? haven't seen any evidence of this.
            Pretty successful? I'd love to see some references (and please don't give me "Boyle")
            Help preserve the right to be a contractor in the UK

            Comment


              #76
              Originally posted by AtW View Post
              Why does it matter if your clients had tax avoidance as primary motivation? Tax avoidance is legal, isn't it?
              It matters because HMRC is conducting a smear campaign directed at the clients in question in order to impose a narrative directly intended to help them sweep their 10+ years of inaptitude under the carpet.
              Help preserve the right to be a contractor in the UK

              Comment


                #77
                Originally posted by DotasScandal View Post
                Very aggressive towards the clients and former clients? yes.
                Aggressive towards the promoters? haven't seen any evidence of this.
                Very sadly that's the case. But what could they do? It was not and still isn't illegal to create these schemes even though in my mind they should have been treated as tax evasion in the first place.

                I think it's the clients who should have aggressively pursued scheme promoters for misselling or anything else that would stick. Getting them bankrupt would at least give some feeling of revenge.

                Originally posted by DotasScandal View Post
                Pretty successful? I'd love to see some references (and please don't give me "Boyle")
                If I was in charge of HMRC I'd define success as big decline in usage of tax avoidance schemes - there is far more money to be collected going forward, rather than backwards, but in order to ensure future collection they need to beat out whatever they can from past users to scare away people for good. I don't have hard evidence but I believe this is happening, so based on MY definition that is successful - one would have to be mad to get into a "scheme" these days.

                Originally posted by DotasScandal View Post
                It matters because HMRC is conducting a smear campaign directed at the clients in question in order to impose a narrative directly intended to help them sweep their 10+ years of inaptitude under the carpet.
                So what's the smear bit in that campaign - that the users of registered tax avoidance schemes were tax avoiders? That's like stating the obvious really.

                Comment


                  #78
                  Originally posted by webberg View Post
                  As has been observed by others in this thread, the evidence is out there. I'm clearly not going to change the view you have arrived at. Ultimately the arbiter will not be me or you of course, but the relevant authorities. I think therefore that I'll reserve my energies for them rather than continue a fruitless debate here.
                  Please don't feed the troll. Cheers.

                  Comment


                    #79
                    Not sure how many times you need to say it but there is NO POINT going after the scheme promoters.. most of them have closed up or done a runner and what good would it do?? Seriously get a life and get off this!

                    The ONLY satisfaction I will get is when we win at the FTT that we were operating within the taxation code at the time and HMRC may implement a 2019 silly tax charge but at least I know I wasn't doing anything wrong. That is my satisfaction.
                    Now please GO AWAY!!

                    Comment


                      #80
                      Indeed
                      This is a re-run on ATW's treatise on avoidance which is still smoking from being shot down last time out.
                      The main thrust being to establish a huge gulf in tax paid vis a vis ltd co avoidance and schemes where no such gulf really existed in individual and less so in absolute terms presumably to make him feel more secure about that avoidance scheme he uses/propounds.

                      Best expend all that energy on the future of contracting thread.

                      As a concerned taxpayer given that IR35 was unenforceable I now demand a retrospective levy on all ltd cos to address any tax that should have been collected but was otherwise not collected - irrespective of fairness, actual facts and circumstances and other "details".

                      Admin
                      I employed several contractors from a public sector background who missed the ample time it gave one to administer limited company affairs, at the taxpayer;s expense It helped sway people that their admin was taken care of as part of a package that appeared to offer certainty around the gilt edged dog's breakfast known as IR35
                      There was also a benefit of a reduced individual rate for tax returns as being part of the scheme collective, as well as assistance with mortgages etc - very much cheaply one might say.

                      Comment

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