Closing the gap
At times it can feel as though tax and accounts are made deliberately confusing to make it hard to u
24/08/2022
There are many reasons why taxation is an important part of most societies, here are 4 of the main objectives achieved or attempted by taxation.
Revenue for public funds
Each year we get a letter stating how much of our PAYE paid in the year went to what, pensions, benefits, interest, defense spending, it’s on there. One of the main way these are paid for is through taxes. The structure of taxes should be used to finance normal governmental activity or the expansion of. Taxation should always be able to pay for pensions, benefits, everything that mkes this country work day to day, week to week.
Regulatory purposes
Where there are items that are legal but not necessarily healthy or good for the environment or something to be discouraged, taxation in the form of duties can be applied. This would apply to alcohol, gambling, fuel. This is not a hard ban on these items, but and financial incentive to discourage bad social and economics consequences. The ability to claim for use of home has been severely restricted lately, with the rhetoric around getting people back into the office, it wouldn’t be a hard to conclude this change is to discourage people from working from home regardless of capability.
Incentive purposes
There are many ways to apply taxation to incentivise certain behaviours by the population of society and in recent years there has been an emphasis on “incentive taxation”. One such scheme is the SEIS, where certain start-up companies can offer to sell shares to investors where those shares provide great tax benefits. These are high risk companies and most fail to survive, however with the tax incentives and spreading your investments these can possibly be very lucrative.
Reduction of Inequalities
Taxation can be used as a way to regulate the socio-economic environment of the nation. Currently in the UK the taxation system has bands for income tax where those that earn more money pay a higher effective rate of tax. Where some may find this unfair, the absolute amount of take home is also more for those lucky individuals. The aim is reducing glaring inequalities of income & wealth and securing social justice for the poorest of society.
There are other purposes of taxation, and a lot do overlap and are interlinked. We must always be vigilant as to what a change in taxation is trying to achieve, what it actually achieves and not just what people say it will achieve. Also the environment in which a tax rule was brought in, may not be the same and have a different effect to what it was achieving before.
A few weeks ago, I included some information regarding the total amount of tax revenue each tax generates for HMRC for the tax year 2018-19.
HMRC annual report and Accounts for 2018-19 shows income tax is the largest revenue for HMRC. Here are the figures in billions.
Income tax 194.0
VAT 135.6
National Ins 135.0
Corp tax 53.5
Duties 49.3
Stamp taxes 15.7
Capital gains tax 9.3
Insurance premium tax 6.4
Student loan 2.5
Fines & penalties 1.1
Other 25.5
I have now included this as its own post as this helps see the bigger picture of which taxes effect your life (and death) most. It's worth noting that inheritance tax, although the most hated by the general populace, doesn't even generate enough to even have it's own line.
We got 4 days to go until the filing deadline for tax year 2019/20, so I thought I would share some interesting little bits and pieces.
For this tax year, we are lucky enough to have the filing deadline extended to 28th February 2021 due to the coronavirus. Payment still needs to be made by 31st January, which may seem silly as the filing deadline is extended.
On 31st January 2020, 735,258 returns were filed, which comes to 6.79% of all returns filed on one single day. 2 of those were filed by me. 60,000 of those were received during the peak filing hour, 4-5pm. Who says that accountants work to the clock.
HMRC annual report and Accounts for 2018-19 shows income tax is the largest revenue for HMRC. Here are the figures in billions.
Income tax 194.0
VAT 135.6
National Ins 135.0
Corp tax 53.5
Duties 49.3
Stamp taxes 15.7
Capital gains tax 9.3
Insurance premium tax 6.4
Student loan 2.5
Fines & penalties 1.1
Other 25.5
Therefore individuals are paying the majority of the tax to HMRC.
Finally, I named this page after the audit term "the expectation gap", after all the corruption and attitude of the 90's destroyed any faith in the audit and accounting profession. All accounting and tax bodies have been trying to repair this ever since and this is my little page doing its part.
14/01/2021
Hi all, every now and then I get it in my mind that there's a particular element of tax, business or accounting that is either in news or relevant that the average person wouldn't understand. Whether this is because it's one of those things that keeps changing (damn you tax) or wasn't taught in schools, or just was never relevant so you never learnt it yourself.
Well good news, I decided to make a page so if you wanted to, you'd never see a post from me on this sort of stuff again and if you did want to you can follow this page.
If there is anything anyone wants me to cover, feel free to message me.
I would also like to say that all posts are based on current rules and oversimplified to keep posts short and simple and applicable to the majority of cases.
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