Sunday 21 March 2010

Transport outside EU, Not VATABLE, VATABLE, NOT VATABLE... make up your mind!

Image this. You book a lorry to transport some goods for you from the UK to Greece. The driver plans a route across Europe to Italy, through the countries to the east of the Adriatic Sea and into Greece.

Before January 1 the supply was in the country where the activity physically took place, to the extent that it took place there. That meant that supplies physically performed outside the EU were outside the scope of VAT. No VAT.

Since January 1 you would be liable to calculate VAT on this service on the whole journey, even though some of this service was provided outside the EU. This is because the rule became that the service was provided where the customer was based. So now you had to self supply, i.e. charge yourself and claim it back. This means you may pay VAT on services provided outside the EU.

Now from March 15 if the transport is outside the EU, no VAT is due.

The change on 15th March was to correct an unintended cost to business. How is business intended to keep up with these changes, why can’t the people who make these regulations live in the real world of running a business... and what happens if the driver has a girlfriend in southern Italy and gets the ferry from Italy to Greece without telling you! Now the journey is wholly in the EU and you don't even know!

Tuesday 16 March 2010

Just Change the law if you don't like it!

HMRC have lost most court cases in the self employment/employment debate. So they have taken the easy way out and they are changing the law so that they can win! They want to deem who is employed in the construction industry,

Maybe just new rules to understand?

Sunday 7 March 2010

What is the tax gap?

What is the tax gap? It is the difference btween what HMRC think they should collect and how much they do collect. £40 billion!

Hope they don't ask me for it!

Friday 5 March 2010

Do it Now!

The press say that an incoming Conservative Government would reduce both the small company rate of Corporation tax to 20% and the main rate to 25%but would pay for it by abolishing the Annual Investment Allowance. Many business intending to invest in equipment over the next year or so are warned that now rather than later would be an excellent move, with the availability of the AIA under threat, and first year allowances of 40% also available for just one more month. A spend of £500,000 now would attract £230,000 in capital allowances, but later this could be as little as £100,000.