HMRC and the accounting and tax professional groups have a joint policy under which firms who HMRC consider are acting irresponsibly and outside the code can be reported to their professional body who can take action.
The code for the Chartered Institute of Taxation is here.
https://www.tax.org.uk/sites/default...FINAL-CIOT.pdf
HMRC claim that many contractors used tax avoidance schemes. They know that almost all such instances were at the insistence or advice of the contractors advisers.
Logic dictates that tens of thousands of contractors would have taken or been given advice by hundreds, perhaps thousands of advisers. Logic then says that HMRC would have made a suitable number of reports under the code.
A FOI request I completed recently says that between 2010 (the year DR arrived) and 2018, HMRC made a total of 63 reports.
Given that perhaps half of those (at least) were in relation to cases at the more serious fraud end of the spectrum, what does that say?
It says to me that once again HMRC had a tool at its behest but that because contractors were not seen as a cash cow (sorry - tax avoiders) until perhaps 2014 and beyond, because HMRC took their eye off the ball, (I'm being kind), but failed to use it.
I have little sympathy for advisers who were put in a conflict between advice and commission and chose the wrong side, but I'm sure that an HMRC publicity campaign backed by a few hundred reports under an existing code, would have deterred more from doing as they did.
Hindsight is always perfect of course, but if the tool was there, why was it not used?
The code for the Chartered Institute of Taxation is here.
https://www.tax.org.uk/sites/default...FINAL-CIOT.pdf
HMRC claim that many contractors used tax avoidance schemes. They know that almost all such instances were at the insistence or advice of the contractors advisers.
Logic dictates that tens of thousands of contractors would have taken or been given advice by hundreds, perhaps thousands of advisers. Logic then says that HMRC would have made a suitable number of reports under the code.
A FOI request I completed recently says that between 2010 (the year DR arrived) and 2018, HMRC made a total of 63 reports.
Given that perhaps half of those (at least) were in relation to cases at the more serious fraud end of the spectrum, what does that say?
It says to me that once again HMRC had a tool at its behest but that because contractors were not seen as a cash cow (sorry - tax avoiders) until perhaps 2014 and beyond, because HMRC took their eye off the ball, (I'm being kind), but failed to use it.
I have little sympathy for advisers who were put in a conflict between advice and commission and chose the wrong side, but I'm sure that an HMRC publicity campaign backed by a few hundred reports under an existing code, would have deterred more from doing as they did.
Hindsight is always perfect of course, but if the tool was there, why was it not used?
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