Avoiding UK Tax? You could be named and shamed – Budget 2009

One aspect of the 2009 budget was a initiative to make people pay their taxes more by threatening to “name and shame” them on the HMSC website.

The budget report states:

Legislation will be introduced, to be bought into effect by Treasury Order, enabling HM Revenue & Customs to publish the names and details of individuals and companies who are penalised for deliberate defaults on or after 1 April 2010 leading to a loss of tax of more than £25,000.

What could be better disincentive for an upright British gentleman businessman, dependent on his reputation, than to avoid having his name splashed across a virtual “naughty step”?

This could be a nod to the public outrage over pensions and such like, angry at the notion of rich bankers suspected of playing the system and so avoiding paying their fair share of tax. This is in addition to a pretty much purely symbolic of adding a 50% tax bracket on the £150,000 bracket – a move that will only bring in £1billion worth of income, small fry compared with the huge sums of ever increasing debt the UK faces for the next 10 years.

The “name and shame” scheme has already been tried in Ireland to good effect, improving tax revenues.

Why not just tie them to the village green stocks and supply free rotten tomatoes to the public – such a move I’m sure would add 10 points to their opinion polls overnight! stocks

Read it for yourself at the hm-treasury website – this is where YOUR money is being spent, you have a right to know where!

Financial Statement and Budget Report

* Chapter A (PDF 307KB)
* Chapter B (PDF 488KB)
* Chapter C (PDF 436KB)
* Lists of abbreviations, charts and tables (PDF 49KB)

What UK citizens get for their taxes per week

Carrying on with our series on where does your money go, lets use those figures from the post – How Much Money The Average UK Family pays in tax

That post concluded, after income tax and all the other tax such as VAT the average family pays £201.34 in tax. Bear in mind this is last years figures, now we own half the banks our public debt is a lot higher – we’ll cover that next.

uk tax

But how much has been spent already? From the Guardian money wall-chart we can get a rough idea.

Of our money given in tax in 2007/2008:

  • 18% to the Dept of Health
  • 10.3% to Education
  • 23.3% to work and pensions
  • 21.3% for benefits
  • 5% for debt interest – this is obviously going to be a lot higher in 2008/2009
  • 6% to the Ministry of Defence
  • 3% for transport policy
  • 5% for Scotland
  • 2.5% for Wales
  • 1% for Northern Ireland
  • 3.6% for Universities
  • 3% for Tax Credits
  • 1% to decommissioning Nuclear Waste
  • 0.5% for Iraq/Afganistan Wars
  • 1% to Policing

Using these figures, an average family earning £32,799 a year contributes, each week:

  • £36 to the NHS
  • £21 for our schools
  • £47 for the OAP’s
  • £43 for those on benefits
  • £10 on the public debt interest
  • £12 for the Army, Navy and Airforce
  • £6 for the roads and rail
  • £10 for Scotland
  • £5 for Wales
  • £2 for Northern Ireland
  • £7.25 for Universities
  • £6 for tax credits
  • £2 storing nuclear waste
  • £1 the Iraq/Afghanistan wars
  • £2 for the police

Working Tax Credits – Do It

I keep meeting self employed people who haven’t heard of this scheme – which is a real shame as its brilliant. 

Basically the motive is to make it worthwhile for people to work – a lot of Tory propaganda in the 80s was aimed at the council estate single parent mum who had loads of kids to get benefits – it was more worthwhile to do that than to actually work. 

Tax Credits seek to correct that by making it more worthwhile to work – if you qualify you get a weekly or monthly payment to bump up your earnings.

If you work more than 30 hours (16 for parents) and earn less than roughly £15,000 – you qualify.

For self employed people this is even more attractive as the costs of the business as taken into account – only actual profit counts against the earnings.

My brother took on tax credits after many urgings from me when he was a musician in Cornwall – after arranging his NI contributions (£10 a month), he got in contact with tax credits – he sent in evidence of his work hours, a diary of jam practices and gigs, along with promotion posters, and recieved the tax credits within 6 weeks of roughly £45 a week.  Not enough to retire on sure, but worth enough to cover petrol getting around. 

One other thing to note is even if this year you are earning over the threshold, Tax credits works on the last tax year up to April – so if you earn £20,000 this year but only £6000 the year before – you may qualify.

Resources:

HM Revenue And Customs Info on Tax Credits

CAB Self Employment Checklist

 

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