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Previously on "Has this been covered yet? - New anti avoidance rules effective immediately"

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  • contractor79
    replied
    They make a law to allow them to rob people's bank accounts. Why are you not taking to the streets about this? You'd whine if someone nicked your wallet with £20 in it.

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    replied
    Originally posted by contractor79 View Post
    Retrospective action due to new laws are immoral and are a disgrace. Stop voting for these thieves.

    Leave a comment:


  • contractor79
    replied
    Retrospective action due to new laws are immoral and are a disgrace. Stop voting for these thieves.

    Leave a comment:


  • Has this been covered yet? - New anti avoidance rules effective immediately

    Smink

    David Gauke, the Treasury minister in charge of taxation, announced a raft of measures, including two that will come into force with immediate effect. He said the changes would raise £2bn by the end of the parliament.
    “As a result of persistent avoidance… the government is announcing that the legislation will now apply... wherever a company is a party to tax avoidance arrangements,” Gauke said.
    But it was the prospect of a new General Anti-Avoidance Rule (GAAR) that caused the most alarm. The rule, which was dismissed by the Labour government as “unworkable”, would give HMRC much more freedom to decide what constitutes tax avoidance.

    Will Morris, head of the CBI tax committee, said a GAAR “would introduce a very unwelcome element of uncertainty to the tax system”.
    There are other measures in the pipeline, designed to crack down on:

    the use of trusts to avoid paying income tax or national insurance on an employee’s pay;

    • the creation of foreign exchange losses or gains in the accounts of investment firms;

    • and the manipulation of VAT rules in so-called “supply splitting”.
    Whipped that one out quickly didn't they!

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