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Business Tax Insider |
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Business Tax Insider articles 11 to 15 of 39 First < Previous Next > Last
A Difficult Customer – a Cautionary Tale
I have just settled an “Employer Compliance Enquiry” for one of my clients and I think it should serve as a warning to all employers, and indeed to all those who are the subject of a Revenue Enquiry of any sort.
You will have to forgive me if I do not go into the technical details of the points that were disputed – to do so might identify the business involved, and in any case, this article is not about the technicalities (fascinating though some of them were, including studying a tax case heard in the previous century involving payments to Scotland Yard detectives!). To learn more details of this article click here
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Author: James Bailey
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Date: 25 January 2008
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Category: Business Tax Insider
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Seasonal Greetings from the Taxman
It is good to know that the spirit of the Christmas season has not entirely passed the taxman by and it is possible for employers to provide employees with a Christmas party without triggering a New Year tax bill. This is made possible by the exemption for annual parties and other functions. To learn more details of this article click here
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Author: Sarah Bradford
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Date: 21 December 2007
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Category: Business Tax Insider
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“Income Shifting” – HM Revenue and Customs’ Brave New World
A consultation document and draft legislation was published in the first week of December, as HMRC’s response to the taxpayer’s victory in the summer in the Arctic Systems tax case.
In that case, the House of Lords had to decide if it was legitimate for a husband and wife to share the dividends from their family company equally, despite the fact that the income of the business was “earned” by the husband, an IT consultant. To learn more details of this article click here
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Author: James Bailey
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Date: 21 December 2007
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Category: Business Tax Insider
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Another layer of TAAR – Capital Gains Tax and Relief for Losses
HMRC have managed to include a “Targeted Anti-Avoidance Rule” (or TAAR) in the last two Finance Acts. The 2006 one applied to companies, and the 2007 one applies to individuals and Trustees.
If you sell an asset and realise a capital loss, you can set that loss against any capital gains in the same tax year, and if there are no such gains you can carry the loss forward to the next tax`year`and set it against gains in that year, and so on. To learn more details of this article click here
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Author: James Bailey
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Date: 23 November 2007
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Category: Business Tax Insider
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Bad News for Non-Doms? – Putting a Price on the “Remittance Basis”
The days leading up to the Pre-Budget Statement on 9 October saw an undignified game of “tit for tat” between Alistair Darling (or, let’s be honest, his puppet-master Gordon) and the Shadow Chancellor, George Osborne. The results were a piece of legislation on Inheritance Tax which had been gathering dust in a drawer in Number 11 Downing Street since March (when the Treasury told Gordon he couldn’t have transferable Nil Rate Bands for IHT and show off by cutting the basic rate of income tax), an ill thought out hike in capital gains tax (to pay for the Nil Rate Band stunt), and a spiteful piece of legislation aimed at the less well off non-doms. To learn more details of this article click here
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Author: James Bailey
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Date: 23 November 2007
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Category: Business Tax Insider
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Business Tax Insider articles 11 to 15 of 39 First < Previous Next > Last
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