Many UK-based businesses, particularly at the smaller end of the SME market, support the aims if not the conduct of UK Uncut and applaud the politicians playing a form of class warfare against multinationals over their failure to contribute “fair” levels of Corporation Tax. Are they wrong?
They are. What they’re missing are two fundamental ingredients to the argument – they pay more Corporation Tax than they need because they don’t make full use of the panoply of allowances and structures larger corporates use, and when it comes to the smallest businesses, what they pay in Corporation Tax is merely a replacement – usually discounted – of the Income Tax they would suffer were the company profits taken as personal income.
Why not use the allowances? Fundamentally, most tax breaks are against costs incurred. If the tax break is only worth 24-odd % of the cost incurred to obtain it, only a fool would incur that cost unless there was a sound business reason for doing so. And smaller companies, particularly owner-managed ones, are either reluctant or unable to incur significant extraneous cost – so they don’t get the associated tax breaks.
If, like Starbucks, you give away equity in your own business to your employees, you’ll get a tax break. How many SME’s would contemplate doing that? If, like the same company, you’re prepared to fund an office infrastructure in Switzerland to handle all your purchasing requirements, then some part of your overall profits will be attributable to your Swiss location – hardly realistic for most SME’s.
If you’re prepared to move your corporate headquarters to Eire, incur the establishment costs over there, pay the exit charge on leaving the UK, then yes, you can benefit from the lowest Corporate Tax charge in the EU. But it is hugely complex and comes with an enormous price tag, both in terms of cash and time.
Better still, move to Mauritius. Get a really, really low corporate tax rate. More complex still.
If you think you’re going to be making Capital Gains, emigrate to Belgium – no CGT!
If you’re looking at VAT on distance-selling, try Luxembourg.
Work all over the place, but not in Hong Kong? Get yourself employed by a Hong Kong company, make sure you become resident there, you’re home free! No tax!!
And if you’re French resident, own your own company generating income from Intellectual Property and taking remuneration and dividends in excess of £800K pa – quick! – get out!! – cross the Channel and save yourself, and your company, a fortune!!!
And that’s the case for the Prosecution. It’s nothing to do with the taxpayer, it’s everything to do with the competition between countries to entice business into their territory. Why do they do it? Because business creates employment, and the vast bulk of government revenues are extracted by taxes on income and taxes on expenditure. Better by far to have more than 700 Starbucks here employing 9,000 people than have another 700 empty stores and 9,000 more on the dole. It pays no corporation tax? Legitimately? Not an issue.
There’s nothing “fair” about tax. It’s whatever each government wants it to be. A revenue-collecting device. An enticement. A discouragement. You don’t get foreign companies setting up in your jurisdiction by discouraging them from doing so. One can hear voices off-stage shouting “hurrah! Let them go!! We don’t want those nasty multinationals here!” – they’re plain wrong. We want the employment prospects, and as consumers, it seems we want what they offer.
Where the UK gets its taxes:
| Income tax |
£155 Billion | 26% of tax revenues | ||
| National Insurance | £106 Billion | 18% of tax revenues | ||
| VAT | £102 Billion | 17% of tax revenues | ||
| Corporation Tax | £44 Billion | 7% of tax revenues |
The information in this article was correct at the date it was first published.
However it is of a generic nature and cannot constitute advice. Specific advice should be sought before any action taken.
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