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Reply to: Track the Finance Bill 2020-21 here
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Previously on "Track the Finance Bill 2020-21 here"
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Following agreement by both Houses on the text of the Bill it received Royal Assent on 22 July. The Bill is now an Act of Parliament (law).
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Originally posted by dammit chloe View PostAnd ironically the ones that can't afford to pay probably make up the meat of any revenue the Treasury hopes to gain.
Many people who could settle will already have done so.
I doubt many will have opted not to settle and fall under the loan charge. (The loan charge may work out cheaper for some, especially now it can be spread across 3 years, but for the majority settling still makes the most sense.)
What HMRC will then be left with is the harder stuff:
1) pre-2010 open years
2) people who are skint
3) the LC resistance (HR, BG etc)
And I hope it's fecking hard work for them.
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Originally posted by DealorNoDeal View PostOn that we can agree.
And, obviously, if you've no hope of paying it (even with TTP) then you haven't got much to lose by rolling the dice with one of the mitigation strategies. I certainly would if I was in that situation.
It's a bit of a tougher call if you can afford to pay it or settle.
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Originally posted by webberg View PostAt the risk of stating the bleeding obvious, HMRC will consider ANY means, method, structure, argument or waving of magic wands, on the loan charge unwelcome and will challenge them all.
The ONLY risk free approach to the loan charge is to pay it.
And, obviously, if you've no hope of paying it (even with TTP) then you haven't got much to lose by rolling the dice with one of the mitigation strategies. I certainly would if I was in that situation.
It's a bit of a tougher call if you can afford to pay it or settle.
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At the risk of stating the bleeding obvious, HMRC will consider ANY means, method, structure, argument or waving of magic wands, on the loan charge unwelcome and will challenge them all.
The ONLY risk free approach to the loan charge is to pay it.
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Originally posted by webberg View PostI was warning people PRE 5th April 2019 not to get involved in structuring to avoid the loan charge.
Whatever HR is doing is clearly not structuring, given the date today.
I'm not tarring HR's position with the same brush as a structured answer because it is a very different position.
Somehow I don't think they'll make the same distinction as you.
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Originally posted by DealorNoDeal View PostNo, but it wasn't that long ago that you were warning people, in no uncertain terms, not to use clever schemes to try and avoid the LC.
Obviously there's a reason you don't want to tar the HR thing with the same brush. Which is fine, and there's no need to elaborate.
Whatever HR is doing is clearly not structuring, given the date today.
I'm not tarring HR's position with the same brush as a structured answer because it is a very different position.
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Originally posted by webberg View PostLet's be clear (and not pedantic).
I don't "know" what HR plan because I have not seen their reasoning, their proposed wording, any advice they may or may not have.
It would hardly be fair to offer an opinion when I'm not in possession of ALL the facts.
Obviously there's a reason you don't want to tar the HR thing with the same brush. Which is fine, and there's no need to elaborate.
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Let's be clear (and not pedantic).
I don't "know" what HR plan because I have not seen their reasoning, their proposed wording, any advice they may or may not have.
It would hardly be fair to offer an opinion when I'm not in possession of ALL the facts.
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Originally posted by DealorNoDeal View PostIs it just me, or does anyone else find this surprising?
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Originally posted by webberg View PostThe Hamilton Rose "solution" - sorry I have no idea as to what it is or where it sits on whatever subjective scale of risk you are using.
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starstuck (and dammit chloe),
Thank you for opening my eyes, and saving me wasting my time.
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Originally posted by webberg View PostI see.
I thought that perhaps some real facts, common sense and a realistic view of the situation was preferable to some of the frankly false and misleading statements being made.
Shows what I know.
Good luck.
You probably believe your own hype, but the reality is you're only here to drum up more business - you're not here for facts, common sense or realism - or altruism! You try to blind with science, but by your own admission just a few posts above, you have absolutely no idea if your plan will actually work and for you it doesn't have to, you get paid no matter what. I remember years ago arguing with you about settlement when you were peddling that "settlement is not really and end to it all". Your posts are all smoke and mirrors and often designed to create uncertainly and worry to drive people into the arms of you - a 'trusted advisor'. It's why you often throw in 'seek professional advice'. I just get so tired of reading it all.
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Originally posted by webberg View PostI see.
I thought that perhaps some real facts, common sense and a realistic view of the situation was preferable to some of the frankly false and misleading statements being made.
Shows what I know.
Good luck.
So it's all very well harrumphing about real and truthful facts, common sense etc but I have no idea where one would find it amongst the tax advisor circles these days. They certainly can't agree with each other, in fact they are miles apart.
I am probably one of the few who have benefitted from the FB changes to the point HMRC have written to me saying they will no longer contact me on my loans and the matter is closed ( dubious IHT aside ). I still, where possible, would like to help those who are not out of the net yet but I honestly couldn't tell them who can be trusted.
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Originally posted by starstruck View PostDealOrNoDeal we get what you are saying .... we've been here many times before, it's a conversation that just goes on and on.
I thought that perhaps some real facts, common sense and a realistic view of the situation was preferable to some of the frankly false and misleading statements being made.
Shows what I know.
Good luck.
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