Responding to the government’s package of six consultation documents for making tax digital (MTD), the CIOT has called for the introduction of mandatory digital record keeping to be delayed beyond the proposed April 2018 start date, to allow for adequate testing and ‘real simplification’ of the t
Responding to the government’s package of six consultation documents for making tax digital (MTD), the CIOT has called for the introduction of mandatory digital record keeping to be delayed beyond the proposed April 2018 start date, to allow for adequate testing and ‘real simplification’ of the tax system to take place first.
The following key points were made:
Read the CIOT’s submissions at http://bit.ly/2eT429C.
A survey of CIOT and ATT members conducted in October found overwhelming support for a delay in implementation. The responses revealed the following views amongst members:
John Cullinane, CIOT’s tax policy director, said: ‘There is a significant risk that small businesses will fall into non-compliance, whether deliberately or inadvertently, unless HMRC reconsiders the timetable for mandating MTD. What is at stake is the spirit of voluntary compliance within our tax system that sees over 90% of all that is due collected without significant intervention from the authorities.’
The CIOT's submission follows a letter sent to the chancellor by Treasury Select Committee (TSC) chair Andrew Tyrie, in which Tyrie also called for a delay to MTD beyond the proposed start date of April 2018.
Tyrie concluded: 'HMRC's proposals are major changes. There remains considerable cause for concern ... Better to get it right than to stick to a rigid timetable.'
Similar concerns were expressed at a TSC hearing held in October, which heard from Rebecca Benneyworth, who appeared in her role as chair of HMRC’s Digital Advisory Group, the ICAEW’s Frank Haskew, the ACCA’s Chas Roy-Chowdhury and the FSB’s Mike Cherry. Whilst the witnesses recognised the potential for improving tax adminstration, they all cautioned the need to rethink some aspects of MTD.
Writing in Tax Journal, Paul Aplin, tax partner at A C Mole & Sons and vice president of the ICAEW. noted a 'striking consistency of views' over MTD. 'Everyone I have spoken to has been concerned about the timetable', Aplin wrote.
'To avoid imposing new burdens – and to give MTD the best chance of genuine success – the entry point should be set much higher (and certainly no lower than the VAT threshold),' Aplin suggested. 'Mandation is the wrong approach.'
Responding to the government’s package of six consultation documents for making tax digital (MTD), the CIOT has called for the introduction of mandatory digital record keeping to be delayed beyond the proposed April 2018 start date, to allow for adequate testing and ‘real simplification’ of the t
Responding to the government’s package of six consultation documents for making tax digital (MTD), the CIOT has called for the introduction of mandatory digital record keeping to be delayed beyond the proposed April 2018 start date, to allow for adequate testing and ‘real simplification’ of the tax system to take place first.
The following key points were made:
Read the CIOT’s submissions at http://bit.ly/2eT429C.
A survey of CIOT and ATT members conducted in October found overwhelming support for a delay in implementation. The responses revealed the following views amongst members:
John Cullinane, CIOT’s tax policy director, said: ‘There is a significant risk that small businesses will fall into non-compliance, whether deliberately or inadvertently, unless HMRC reconsiders the timetable for mandating MTD. What is at stake is the spirit of voluntary compliance within our tax system that sees over 90% of all that is due collected without significant intervention from the authorities.’
The CIOT's submission follows a letter sent to the chancellor by Treasury Select Committee (TSC) chair Andrew Tyrie, in which Tyrie also called for a delay to MTD beyond the proposed start date of April 2018.
Tyrie concluded: 'HMRC's proposals are major changes. There remains considerable cause for concern ... Better to get it right than to stick to a rigid timetable.'
Similar concerns were expressed at a TSC hearing held in October, which heard from Rebecca Benneyworth, who appeared in her role as chair of HMRC’s Digital Advisory Group, the ICAEW’s Frank Haskew, the ACCA’s Chas Roy-Chowdhury and the FSB’s Mike Cherry. Whilst the witnesses recognised the potential for improving tax adminstration, they all cautioned the need to rethink some aspects of MTD.
Writing in Tax Journal, Paul Aplin, tax partner at A C Mole & Sons and vice president of the ICAEW. noted a 'striking consistency of views' over MTD. 'Everyone I have spoken to has been concerned about the timetable', Aplin wrote.
'To avoid imposing new burdens – and to give MTD the best chance of genuine success – the entry point should be set much higher (and certainly no lower than the VAT threshold),' Aplin suggested. 'Mandation is the wrong approach.'