It wasn’t mentioned in the Chancellor’s speech, but the Spring Statement papers contain a major suite of anti-tax avoidance proposals, probably the toughest ever introduced. If enacted this will…
Always interesting to see when the speech is over and the fine detail starts filtering through what is actually included, and you know what, this sounds actually very good. More of this please.
It’s great news for agency workers pushed into these schemes unwittingly or otherwise.
I’m not seeing anything about closing the tax loopholes that matter the most though, the ones that allow Amazon et al to redirect profit to an offshore company and thus hide how much tax they owe.
In fact, Labour have mooted the idea of cutting the digital services tax designed to target these companies specifically. So yeah, not celebrating anything considering who they’re shafting to fund the aforementioned.
Always interesting to see when the speech is over and the fine detail starts filtering through what is actually included, and you know what, this sounds actually very good. More of this please.
It’s great news for agency workers pushed into these schemes unwittingly or otherwise.
I’m not seeing anything about closing the tax loopholes that matter the most though, the ones that allow Amazon et al to redirect profit to an offshore company and thus hide how much tax they owe.
In fact, Labour have mooted the idea of cutting the digital services tax designed to target these companies specifically. So yeah, not celebrating anything considering who they’re shafting to fund the aforementioned.