Brexit – Moving beyond simple slogans
Introduction
Untypical of a British Summer, the Government was (apparently) very busy with a stream of publications and position papers relating to Brexit.
Untypical of a British Summer, the Government was (apparently) very busy with a stream of publications and position papers relating to Brexit.
Development Securities (No 9) Ltd and others v HMRC [2017] UKFTT 565 (14 July 2017), involved the determination of the
The Chancellor had a difficult path to tread in putting together his first Autumn Budget.
We have known that the OECD’s Country by Country Reporting (CbCR) has been on the horizon for a few years now, but the first deadline is rapidly approaching and companies still have further work to
The fundamental principle of VAT (so much so that it is the basis of the name of the tax) is that each party in a chain of supplies is required to hand over the tax in relation to the extent to whi
On 13 July 2017, after representations from many professional bodies and stakeholders (including CIOT, ATT and LITRG), the Financial Secretary to the Treasury, Mel Stride, announced a relaxation in
HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has focused heavily on offshore matters in recent years, but believes that a huge amount of tax remains uncollected.
Clause 64 of the Finance Bill, which is now awaiting its second reading in the House of Lords on the 15th November and is expected to get Royal Assent before the Autumn Budget in November 2017, wil
In the interests of simplification, there should be some grateful acknowledgement of the fact that many of the concepts well known from the income tax legislation are replicated in the tax credits
There has been considerable discussion in the professional press and the media more generally about the new penalties and criminal sanctions which have been introduced to deal with those who ‘facil