HMRC's £186m Masterclass in Incompetence: They Spent a Fortune to Claw Back Just £44m on the Loan Charge – Absolute Shambles
Morning, you hard-pressed taxpayers still waiting years for a refund,
getting hung up on deadline day, or being chased for trivial £50 bills
while HMRC's own staff rack up half a million sick days. Here's a story
that sums up everything wrong with the taxman in one jaw-dropping
number.
Fresh figures reveal that HMRC has blown £186 million of your money over six years trying to enforce the controversial Loan Charge on disguised remuneration schemes. And what have they actually recovered from individual settlements? A pathetic £44 million.
That's right – they spent £186m to get back £44m. For every pound recovered from those 800 individuals who settled, they burned over £4.22.
Even if you take their broader claim of £250m in total settlements
(including employers), it's still a catastrophic return on investment.
Annual compliance costs have hit £31 million in recent years. This isn't
enforcement; it's a black hole with better PR.
The Loan Charge was meant to hammer people who used "disguised pay"
schemes – where contractors and others were paid via loans that never
got repaid, dodging income tax and NI. Fair enough in principle if it
was pure avoidance. But the way HMRC and the government handled it has
been a textbook case of retrospective overreach, ruining lives, driving
some to suicide, and now proving to be an expensive, inefficient
disaster.
MPs and campaigners are calling it a "profound failure".
No wonder. While HMRC was pouring millions into this crackdown, they
couldn't answer phones, process refunds, or stop issuing phantom £2.8
billion demands to small businesses. They let their own compliance
officer launder £3.3m and walk with a suspended sentence, but ordinary
folk caught in these schemes got the full weight of retrospective
legislation and aggressive pursuit.
And don't forget the human cost – families destroyed, bankruptcies,
mental health crises – all while the taxman racks up costs that could
have funded proper helplines or actual customer service instead of this
botched vendetta.
This is peak HMRC: incompetent, wasteful, and utterly contemptuous of
value for money. They demand perfection and instant compliance from us
(with penalty points and automatic fines), yet when they go after a
target, they manage to lose money hand over fist. £186m spent to recover
£44m? That's not closing the tax gap – that's widening the incompetence
gap to Olympic proportions.
Rachel Reeves and her mandarins love lecturing about "fairness" and
"closing loopholes", but when their own enforcement machine turns into
the world's most expensive paper-shredder, the only people getting
fairly screwed are the long-suffering British taxpayer.
Tax does have to be taxing.
But when HMRC spends £186 million to
claw back £44 million while the rest of us drown in red tape and MTD
quarterly reporting hell? That's not taxing – that's institutional theft and breathtaking incompetence on a grand scale.
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