The CIOT has focused on three areas in its response to the general consultation on draft legislation for the next Finance Bill.
Concerning CGT on transfers of assets between spouses in the process of separating, the CIOT welcomes a three-year extension of the no-gain/no-loss window beyond the tax year of separation but believes that the change would potentially benefit more people if there were an option to elect for the April 2023 disposal date criterion to be backdated to 6 April 2022. The CIOT also comments on the position where individual A transfers an asset into bare trust rather than disposing of it directly to individual B.
On the transfer pricing documentation requirements:
Regarding pensions net pay arrangements, the CIOT believed that treating top-up payments made to those who contribute to pension schemes operating net pay arrangements as UK employment income for income tax purposes raises issues with certainty and could give rise to anomalous outcomes. The top-up payments could instead be treated as either a ‘tax nothing’ or a tax refund.
The CIOT has focused on three areas in its response to the general consultation on draft legislation for the next Finance Bill.
Concerning CGT on transfers of assets between spouses in the process of separating, the CIOT welcomes a three-year extension of the no-gain/no-loss window beyond the tax year of separation but believes that the change would potentially benefit more people if there were an option to elect for the April 2023 disposal date criterion to be backdated to 6 April 2022. The CIOT also comments on the position where individual A transfers an asset into bare trust rather than disposing of it directly to individual B.
On the transfer pricing documentation requirements:
Regarding pensions net pay arrangements, the CIOT believed that treating top-up payments made to those who contribute to pension schemes operating net pay arrangements as UK employment income for income tax purposes raises issues with certainty and could give rise to anomalous outcomes. The top-up payments could instead be treated as either a ‘tax nothing’ or a tax refund.