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The vaccine Budget?

Leontia Doran

By Leontia Doran

In this article, Leontia Doran examines last month’s UK Budget.

Last month was newly appointed Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak’s first Budget and the first UK Budget in over 16 months.

It came just weeks after the UK’s departure from the EU amidst the deepening COVID-19 crisis, with many seeing the Budget as an opportunity to vaccinate the UK economy. The Chancellor took several steps in that direction in the days and weeks following the Budget. An extra £210 million was promised for Northern Ireland’s budget.

In last month’s UK feature article, Malachy McLernon, Tax Director at PKF FPM, penned a letter to the Chancellor setting out his wishlist for Budget Day. Many of Malachy’s desired changed were subsequently announced on 11 March.

VAT postponed accounting

Prior to the Budget, the Government intended to introduce postponed accounting for VAT from 1 January 2021 only if the EU transition period ended in a no-trade deal scenario.

On Budget day, the Budget announcements extend the availability of postponed accounting for import VAT to post-transition period trading arrangements, in whatever form these may take. This is a positive move, and one Chartered Accountants Ireland has called for.

This means that from 1 January 2021, VAT will not be immediately due at the point of import when buying from outside the UK, including the EU. It will instead be payable on the trader’s next VAT return, when they will also be able to simultaneously claim relief for the VAT paid in most cases. According to the Budget publications, this measure is expected to cost the Exchequer just over £3.5 billion in 2020/21.

Business tax measures

The Chancellor made a number of announcements in this area, most of which were signposted in advance of Budget day. It was also confirmed that the UK’s digital services tax is proceeding as planned from 1 April 2020.

Meeting the Conservative Party’s manifesto promise not to reduce the rate of corporation tax to 17% from 1 April 2020, instead the rate will stay at 19% from that date. The 17% rate has already been enacted in legislation via the Finance Act 2016, and therefore an amendment is included in the Finance Bill.

The annual rate of capital allowances available for qualifying investments to construct new, or renovate old, non-residential structures and buildings (known as the Structures & Buildings Allowance (SBA)) will increase from 2% to 3%. The change will take effect from 1 April 2020 for corporation tax and 6 April 2020 for income tax. The SBA was introduced in Budget 2018.

The Government will also increase the Employment Allowance from £3,000 to £4,000 from April 2020. The Employment Allowance can be used against the National Insurance Contribution (NIC) bill of a business but only where, from April 2020, the total employer’s NIC liability in the previous tax year was under £100,000.

Legislation is also included in Finance Bill 2020 to remove the pre-2002 exclusion from the Intangible Fixed Assets regime for investments in intellectual property and other intangible assets. According to the publications, this means that tax relief for the cost of acquiring corporate intangible assets on or after 1 July 2020 will be provided under a single regime, subject to restrictions to prevent tax avoidance. A policy paper has been published, setting out this measure in more detail.

And finally, the rate of the taxable Research & Development (R&D) expenditure credit for companies claiming under the “large” R&D tax relief regime will increase from 12% to 13% from 1 April 2020. As the corporation tax rate will stay at 19% from this date, the net tax saved from every £1 of qualifying R&D under this scheme will now be 10.53 pence.

Capital gains tax entrepreneurs’ relief lifetime limit

Entrepreneurs’ relief (ER) was first introduced in April 2008 after the abolition of taper relief and provides a 10% rate of capital gains on qualifying business disposals. In recent years, the relief has been tweaked and its conditions amended. Most recently, Budget 2018 extended the ownership period of qualifying ER assets from one year to two years.

In the Budget, the Chancellor had two options: to either further curtail the relief, or abolish it altogether. The Chancellor chose to curtail and since 11 March 2020, the lifetime limit on gains eligible for the relief is £1 million (reduced from £10 million). ER will also be known as Business Asset Disposal Relief, going forward.

The Chancellor also included several anti-forestalling clauses in the draft legislation, which are designed to prevent taxpayers locking in access to the previous £10 million lifetime limit for contracts entered pre-11 March 2020 but not yet completed. A specific anti-avoidance rule has also been introduced for certain share-for-share exchanges that occurred after 6 April 2019, but before 11 March 2020. More detail on this is available in the relevant policy paper.

Personal tax measures

Changes were expected to the pensions annual allowance limit. This is the maximum amount of tax-relieved pension savings that can be made in a year. Prior to 2019/20, the annual allowance for additional rate taxpayers tapered down from £40,000 to a minimum of £10,000 by £1 for every £2 of income in excess of £150,000.

The Budget announced that the two tapered annual allowance thresholds will each be raised by £90,000. This means that from 2020/21 the “threshold income” will be £200,000, so individuals with income below this level will not be affected by the tapered annual allowance, and the annual allowance will only begin to taper down for individuals who also have an “adjusted income” above £240,000.

The minimum level to which the annual allowance can taper down will reduce from £10,000 to £4,000 from April 2020 onwards. This reduction will only affect individuals with total income (including pension accrual) over £300,000. Proposals to offer greater pay in lieu of pensions for senior clinicians in the NHS pension scheme will not be taken forward.

The lifetime allowance, the maximum amount someone can accrue in a registered pension scheme in a tax-efficient manner over their lifetime, will increase in line with inflation to £1,073,100 from 6 April 2020.

The Chancellor also confirmed the Government’s commitment to increase the thresholds at which employees and the self-employed start paying NIC from £8,632 to £9,500 from April 2020. This is the first step in meeting the Government’s ambition to increase these thresholds to £12,500 as set out in the Conservative Party manifesto.

In addition, the maximum flat rate income tax deduction available to employees to cover additional household expenses will increase from £4 per week to £6 per week where they work at home under home-working arrangements. This will take effect from April 2020.

And finally, the band of savings income that is subject to the 0% starting tax rate will remain.

HMRC’s standing in insolvency

As announced in Budget 2018, the Government will change the rules to make HMRC a secondary preferential creditor for certain tax debts. However, the Budget delayed the commencement date of this measure from 6 April 2020 to 1 December 2020. It also extends this measure to include Northern Ireland.

This reform will only apply to taxes collected and held by businesses on behalf of other taxpayers (VAT, PAYE, income tax, employee NICs and CIS deductions). The rules for taxes owed by businesses themselves, such as corporation tax and employer NICs, remain unchanged. This legislation is introduced in Finance Bill 2020.

Stamp duty land tax (SDLT)

Three stamp tax announcements were made on Budget day.

From 1 April 2021, the Government will introduce a 2% SDLT surcharge on non-UK residents purchasing residential property in England and Northern Ireland. The original consultation in this area proposed a 1% surcharge.

The Government will also introduce a relief for qualifying housing co-operatives from the Annual Tax on Enveloped Dwellings (ATED) Regime and the 15% flat rates of SDLT on purchases of UK residential properties over £500,000. The SDLT relief in England and Northern Ireland will take effect from the date of the 2020 Autumn Budget and the UK-wide ATED relief will apply from 1 April 2021 (with a refund available for 2020/21).

In Finance Act 2018/19, the Government introduced a targeted market value rule to prevent reduction of the tax due on share acquisitions when listed shares are transferred to a connected company. This rule is being extended to unlisted shares in Finance Bill 2020. As part of this change, the relevant legislation will also be amended to prevent a double tax charge arising on certain company reorganisations.

Avoidance, evasion etc.

As has become traditional, the Budget announced a set of targeted anti-avoidance and evasion measures. The Budget 2020 measures are specifically targeted at the construction industry, tobacco, certain big businesses and promoters of tax avoidance schemes. The Government is aiming to raise an additional £4.7 billion overall between now and 2024/25 through these measures.

The Government will also legislate in Finance Bill 2020/21 to make the renewal of licenses to drive taxis and private hire vehicles (PHVs, e.g. minicabs), operate PHV firms, and deal in scrap metal conditional on applicants completing checks that confirm they are appropriately registered for tax. These changes will take effect in England and Wales in April 2022. The Government is considering extending this reform to Scotland and Northern Ireland in the future and will work with the devolved administrations to this effect.

A discussion document will be published in spring 2020 seeking views on the wider application of tax conditionality. Tax conditionality refers to a principle whereby businesses are granted access to Government awards and authorisations (such as approvals, licenses and grants) only if they are able to demonstrate good tax compliance.

The Government is also planning to invest in additional compliance officers and new technology for HMRC. This investment is aiming to bring in £4.4 billion of additional tax revenue up to 2024/25 by enabling HMRC to further reduce the tax gap “through additional compliance activity and expanding debt collection capabilities”.

Administration and miscellaneous tidbits

Additional funding for HMRC and a new notification process for large businesses feature in this category.

VAT

In an unexpected move, the Government will introduce legislation to apply a zero rate of VAT to e-publications from 1 December 2020.

This follows on from the recent Tribunal decision in News Corp UK & Ireland Limited v HMRC [2019]. The Upper Tribunal in that case found that electronic editions of newspapers should be treated in the same way as printed newspapers for VAT, and zero-rated.

Several other measures were announced for VAT:

Energy and environmental measures

Not surprisingly, the Budget confirmed that the plastic packaging tax will commence, as previously announced.

This tax will apply from April 2022 and is designed to incentivise the use of recycled plastic in packaging. The Budget sets the rate at £200 per tonne of plastic packaging that contains less than 30% recycled plastic. This will apply to the production and importation of plastic packaging.

The Government has stated that it will keep the level of the rate and threshold under review to ensure that the tax remains effective in increasing the use of recycled plastic. It also intends to extend the scope of the tax to the importation of filled plastic packaging and apply a minimum threshold of 10 tonnes of plastic packaging to ensure that the smallest businesses are not disproportionately impacted. A further consultation on the detailed design and implementation of the tax, which includes consideration of an exemption for certain types of medical packaging, has also been launched.

The following measures were also announced:

Transport and other taxes

Fuel duty has been frozen for the tenth year in a row. And, surprisingly, there were none of the usual duty changes on budget day to beers, wines, spirits or ciders. However, the Chancellor did make clear that future fuel duty rates will be considered alongside measures that are needed to help meet the UK’s net zero commitment.

Last but not least….

Sir Amyas Morse recommended in the Loan Charge Review, published in December 2019, that “There should be a new strategy published within six months, addressing how the Government will establish a more effective system of oversight, which may include formal regulation, for tax advisers”.

Following on from that, the Government published a call for evidence on “raising standards for tax advice”. This is seeking evidence about providers of tax advice, current standards upheld by tax advisers, and the effectiveness of the Government’s efforts to support those standards.

Conclusion

The Budget 2020 announcements and publications can be found on Gov.uk which also links to HMRC’s dedicated Budget 2020 tax-related documents and announcements page. As usual, the main Budget documents are the Red Book and the Overview of Tax Legislation and Rates (OOTLAR).

OOTLAR contains detailed tax information including Tax Information and Impact Notes on all the Budget and Finance Bill measures, and has informed much of our coverage of this Budget.

As always, the devil is often in the detail; the Finance Bill has now been published. The Budget coverage herein should therefore be read in that context.

Leontia Doran FCA is UK Taxation Specialist with the Advocacy & Voice Department at Chartered Accountants Ireland.

Email: leontia.doran@charteredaccountants.ie