Other Matters
Gift Aid: transitional relief
As mentioned in the Personal Tax section, the basic rate of income
tax will be cut from 6 April 2008 to 20%.
Donations to charity under Gift Aid are made under deduction of
basic rate tax which the charity is then able to reclaim. With a 22%
basic rate, a cash donation of £100 grosses up to £128.20 in the
hands of the charity. At a 20% basic rate, the same donation will
only gross up to £125 for the charity.
UK charities and Community Amateur Sports Clubs (CASCs) that claim
repayments of tax in respect of qualifying Gift Aid donations, and
charitable intermediaries making claims on their behalf, will be
entitled to a transitional relief to mitigate the effect of the
change in the basic rate.
A transitional relief payment will be paid by HMRC to the charity,
CASC, etc when a claim for repayment of tax is made relating to
qualifying Gift Aid donations made in the tax years 2008/09 to
2010/11.
The government also intends to implement a package of measures aimed
at reducing the administrative burden for charities in operating the
Gift Aid scheme.
Review of HMRC powers, deterrents and safeguards
In 2007 legislative provisions on a new penalty regime were
introduced. Further provisions will be implemented by HMRC covering:
- the power to obtain information and documents
- the production of documents
- restrictions on powers to obtain information and documents
- appeals against notices
- offences in relation to documents
- powers to inspect businesses
- penalties.
HMRC also want to extend the new penalty provisions introduced
last year to cover all taxes, not just the five main taxes that they
administer. Most of these new provisions will take effect for
2009/10 onwards.
Comment
One of the most contentious areas is the power to inspect
business premises. Currently HMRC have the power to inspect
records only for the purposes of PAYE and VAT. The VAT
legislation also gives a right of access to premises but no
equivalent power exists in direct tax. HMRC consider it to
be a very important part of the new investigation process.
They state that the procedure has advantages for both
taxpayers and HMRC, although the reasons they give for this
do seem to be largely in their own favour! |
Payment, repayment and debts
HMRC intend to introduce new legislation to:
- enable HMRC to introduce a credit card payment service from
autumn 2008
- enable HMRC, later this year, to set the repayments they
must make to individuals and businesses against amounts owed to
them
- modernise and align HMRC’s debt enforcement powers to
collect unpaid sums by taking control of goods in England and
Wales or by taking action through the civil courts.