by admin | Nov 26, 2015 | Advisory, Enterprise, Fugacious, Professional
With the dust settling on the first Autumn Statement to feature a quotation from Chairman Mao’s little red book, practitioners and laypeople alike have been scouring George’s blue book for elephant traps. Here’s our take: Working Tax Credits – public finances ride to the rescue The OBR has forecast an improved position in the public finances, giving the government the wiggle room it needs to drop its widely unwelcome plans to bring in an early phase-out of Working Tax Credits. WTCs will be replaced in due course by the Universal Credit anyway so the Chancellor’s previous master stroke of phasing them out has been replaced by an even bigger master stroke of dropping the whole plan. A lucky Chancellor indeed. Boom! A big hit for big business Big business will pay the cost of an ‘Apprenticeship Levy’. The Treasury’s blue book suggest that the take from this will be a whopping round £3bn rounded up. To put that in perspective, that’s a whole 7% of the existing Corporation Tax take. But this is not a tax rise. Oh no. It’s a LEVY. (We hope you can see the difference too.) In the round, the levy will apply to larger firms with an annual payroll of greater than c. £3m. But as with other stealth taxes we think big business will take a little while to come to terms with the stomach punch they’ve received. Woah! A near thing for small businesses There is a complete muddle at the moment between the intersection of travel & subsistence rules, intermediary legislation, employment status and close company rules on dividends. From the Treasury’s populist perspective, tax avoiders are hiding...