Negotiating the minefield
Gone are the days of tax directors resigning themselves to a job in the shadows. Never has tax been as high profile and, as a result, the role of the tax function is increasingly complicated.
Gone are the days of tax directors resigning themselves to a job in the shadows. Never has tax been as high profile and, as a result, the role of the tax function is increasingly complicated.
Many companies have recently moved, or are about to move, from preparing their accounts in accordance with UK GAAP (excluding FRS 26) (‘Old UK GAAP’) to preparing their accounts in accordance with
It was interesting reading Chris Jones’s President’s page in last month’s Tax Adviser on the challenge faced by ATT and CIOT in trying to protect the reputation of the tax profession and how we mig
The latest CIOT/IFS debate took place on Monday last week at the Royal Society of Arts (RSA) in central London and focused on ‘the politics of tax change’.
I am sure I am not alone in the range of perceptions about the UK tax system that I encounter regularly.
The great thing about tax is that it is constantly changing so there is never a shortage of topics to develop into training seminars.
In the first Budget of this year the then coalition government announced: ‘It would be asking the regulatory bodies who police professional standards to take on a greater lead and responsibility in
Are you bracing yourself for yet another January? If you are, have you paused to think how HMRC’s changes to digital services might affect you in the future?
Have you been dusting off your owner-managed business spreadsheets recently? There have certainly been many changes this year that require advisers to work out the maths.
At a recent ATT/CIOT members’ tax conference, the professional standards team from Artillery House, which was running a session on professional standards, was asked about auto-enrolment.