Following consultation between February and May 2017 on a group of new sanctions against evasion of tobacco duty and other excise duties, HMRC will carry out further work on a group of proposed sanctions for evasion of tobacco duty, with a view to confirming early next year how it intends to proc
Following consultation between February and May 2017 on a group of new sanctions against evasion of tobacco duty and other excise duties, HMRC will carry out further work on a group of proposed sanctions for evasion of tobacco duty, with a view to confirming early next year how it intends to proceed. The main conclusions were:
The government has decided not to introduce further controls on importers or exporters of tobacco products and will not, at this stage, seek to introduce a supply-chain licensing scheme aimed at tackling the illicit trade, following a separate consultation held early in 2016.
Legislation in the second Finance Bill 2017 will introduce mandatory licensing of tobacco manufacturing machinery in the UK from August 2018. HMRC is consulting until 5 December on the draft Tobacco Products Manufacturing Machinery (Licensing Scheme) Regulations 2017. Registration for the scheme is expected to begin in April 2018, with full implementation and enforcement powers coming into effect on 1 August 2018. See http://bit.ly/2AfSAiK.
Following consultation between February and May 2017 on a group of new sanctions against evasion of tobacco duty and other excise duties, HMRC will carry out further work on a group of proposed sanctions for evasion of tobacco duty, with a view to confirming early next year how it intends to proc
Following consultation between February and May 2017 on a group of new sanctions against evasion of tobacco duty and other excise duties, HMRC will carry out further work on a group of proposed sanctions for evasion of tobacco duty, with a view to confirming early next year how it intends to proceed. The main conclusions were:
The government has decided not to introduce further controls on importers or exporters of tobacco products and will not, at this stage, seek to introduce a supply-chain licensing scheme aimed at tackling the illicit trade, following a separate consultation held early in 2016.
Legislation in the second Finance Bill 2017 will introduce mandatory licensing of tobacco manufacturing machinery in the UK from August 2018. HMRC is consulting until 5 December on the draft Tobacco Products Manufacturing Machinery (Licensing Scheme) Regulations 2017. Registration for the scheme is expected to begin in April 2018, with full implementation and enforcement powers coming into effect on 1 August 2018. See http://bit.ly/2AfSAiK.