The Conservative party published its election manifesto on 18 May, giving little detail on tax plans beyond what has been announced previously and those Finance Bill measures we expect to see reintroduced early in the next Parliament (http://bit.ly/2pOzfnT).
The Conservative party published its election manifesto on 18 May, giving little detail on tax plans beyond what has been announced previously and those Finance Bill measures we expect to see reintroduced early in the next Parliament (http://bit.ly/2pOzfnT). Among those receiving a specific mention are:
The manifesto contains promises to:
A variety of checks on executive pay and corporate governance would be introduced, including:
Dominic Stuttaford, tax partner at Norton Rose Fulbright, described the manifesto as ‘unsurprisingly short on detail’. If re-elected on 8 June, a Conservative government will, he observed, ‘have the freedom both to raise taxes and restructure the tax system to meet the challenges ahead’. Stuttaford welcomed commitments to reduce corporation tax and simplify the tax system, adding that any such simplification should include both small and large businesses.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies commented that abandoning the pensions ‘triple lock’ and moving to a ‘double lock’ will do very little to relieve pressure on the public finances, as both average earnings and inflation are unlikely to fall below 2.5% over the long term.
On the proposal to require listed companies to publish pay ratios, Graeme Standen, executive remuneration expert at Pinsent Masons, sees this as a ‘refinement’ of a recent green paper proposal for reporting the ratio of CEO pay to that of the median worker.
‘Given that quoted companies often have large non-UK workforces of very varied composition, and that the relevant political and social sensitivities are UK-specific,’ Standen said, it looks ‘sensible and practical’ to focus on broader UK workforce pay.
The Conservative party published its election manifesto on 18 May, giving little detail on tax plans beyond what has been announced previously and those Finance Bill measures we expect to see reintroduced early in the next Parliament (http://bit.ly/2pOzfnT).
The Conservative party published its election manifesto on 18 May, giving little detail on tax plans beyond what has been announced previously and those Finance Bill measures we expect to see reintroduced early in the next Parliament (http://bit.ly/2pOzfnT). Among those receiving a specific mention are:
The manifesto contains promises to:
A variety of checks on executive pay and corporate governance would be introduced, including:
Dominic Stuttaford, tax partner at Norton Rose Fulbright, described the manifesto as ‘unsurprisingly short on detail’. If re-elected on 8 June, a Conservative government will, he observed, ‘have the freedom both to raise taxes and restructure the tax system to meet the challenges ahead’. Stuttaford welcomed commitments to reduce corporation tax and simplify the tax system, adding that any such simplification should include both small and large businesses.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies commented that abandoning the pensions ‘triple lock’ and moving to a ‘double lock’ will do very little to relieve pressure on the public finances, as both average earnings and inflation are unlikely to fall below 2.5% over the long term.
On the proposal to require listed companies to publish pay ratios, Graeme Standen, executive remuneration expert at Pinsent Masons, sees this as a ‘refinement’ of a recent green paper proposal for reporting the ratio of CEO pay to that of the median worker.
‘Given that quoted companies often have large non-UK workforces of very varied composition, and that the relevant political and social sensitivities are UK-specific,’ Standen said, it looks ‘sensible and practical’ to focus on broader UK workforce pay.