Showing posts with label clasper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clasper. Show all posts

Thursday, 22 August 2013

Clasper Gets His Coats



I see that Mike Clasper, the ex chairman of HMRC, has been appointed as chairman of Coats the zip manufacturer owned by Guiness Peat.

The FT reports that Coats will be floated on the Stock Exchange.

Tax does have to be taxing.

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Tuesday, 10 July 2012

The Secrets of The Taxman II - #Taxman



Those of you who missed the Channel 4 Dispatches documentary about HMRC's tax avoidance hypocrisy can watch it via this link "The Secrets of The Taxman".

Antony Barnett, the reporter who featured in the programme, has written an article to accompany it. I reproduce it in full below (you will see a few familiar names mentioned):

"It's a perfectly legal activity. Frowned upon by some and actively encouraged by others. Tax avoidance is now a subject that has taken centre stage of the political debate. The Chancellor has described some tax avoidance as 'morally repugnant' and The Prime Minister has called it 'morally unacceptable'.

Nobody likes paying taxes but with nation's finances in such a desperate state the job of collecting tax revenue has become vital to fund public services. And that jobs falls to Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs.

Recently HMRC has been criticised for doing 'sweetheart' deals with companies like Goldman Sachs and appearing not to care enough about avoidance schemes like the one used by comedian Jimmy Carr to avoid paying income tax. To some, it has appeared that when it comes to paying tax there is one rule for the rich and big business and another for everybody else.

We at Dispatches decided to take a closer look at those who are running The Revenue. At the top, is a board with non-executive directors who have the job of holding the HMRC to account. These directors are appointed to ensure the highest standards of governance and advise on the Revenue's strategy.

The first board director we looked at was Phil Hodkinson, a former finance director at banking group HBOS plc. Hodkinson has a very important role at the Revenue as he is the chair of the HMRC's ethics and responsibilities committee. 

On the HMRC website it states that as well as being a trustee of the BBC's Children in Need he was a director of a FTSE 100 company called Resolution Ltd, where he earns more than £125,000 a year for a few days work a year. Following a few inquiries about this company, it quickly emerged that Resolution Ltd was not structured like a typical FTSE 100 company.

Resolution Ltd is in the business of buying - and within a few years - selling life insurance firms for a large profit. Although its main operating business, like Friends Provident, are all in the UK, the listed firm is actually incorporated in Guernsey for tax purposes. This means the company's board, of which Hodkinson is part of, has to fly to Guernsey to make key strategic decisions.

Why would a company go to this length? Resolution Ltd and Mr Hodkinson insists the company is not in Guernsey for tax purposes but other financial reasons. Yet that appeared to contradict a statement in Resolution Ltd's own company documents. Tax experts we spoke to explained that one tax Resolution Ltd will not have to worry about is a tax on any capital gain they make from selling a life insurance firm.

If they were resident in the UK for tax purposes, then they might potentially face a large tax bill when they dispose of parts of their business. There are some exemptions that might apply but the taxation of life assurance funds is very complex and being offshore in Guernsey means Resolution Ltd does not have to worry about any future corporate taxes on the sale of UK businesses.

Mr Hodkinson told us that as a board member of HMRC it was important to him that tax avoidance wasn't a motivation for being in Guernsey and that the Revenue was aware of his role with Resolution Ltd.

Dispatches also examined the outside interests of other board directors. Until a few days ago, John Spence chaired the HMRC's audit and risk committee. Mr Spence is also non-executive chairman of SpicerHaart - an estate agent and financial services group.

One of the most controversial areas of tax avoidance is schemes to enable the wealthy to avoid paying stamp duy when they buy a property. We were surprised to discover a manager at one of SpicerHaart's branches advertising that he could help buyers avoid up to 50% stamp duty, which he confirmed through a series of emails and a phone call.

We decided to ring a few more branches up to see how widespread this was. We called a number of branches of Fine, SpicerHaart's top-end agency, and one of their associate directors said he'd be able to help us avoid stamp duty using a perfectly legal scheme. As a prospective buyer, we arranged to view a £2.6m property he was selling and when we met him the SpicerHaart employee claimed if we used the scheme we could avoid paying more than £50,000 in stamp duty.

He told us he'd already helped tycoons from China and India avoid large stamp duty bills.
Mr Spence told us that SpicerHaart does not condone any schemes that avoid stamp duty and the two managers Dispatches had spoken to had broken company rules.

During the course of our investigation we also discovered that the outgoing chairman of HMRC, Mike Clasper, was a director of subsidiary company of Which? Ltd, which uses the offshore tax haven of Mauritius to invest in its publishing venture in India. Tax campaigners claim companies use Mauritius in this way to avoid paying certain taxes in India.

Clasper told us the company was not avoiding taxes either in India or the UK.

The man who will be replacing Clasper is Ian Barlow, who was a senior partner of accountancy firm KPMG. When we looked at his track record we discovered that during the time he headed up KPMG's tax department the firm was involved in a number of controversial tax avoidance schemes that ended up in court. One was aimed at helping a corporate client avoid some £4m in VAT.

The HMRC told us they were aware of Barlow's past and had hired him for his extensive knowledge of tax.

In its attempts to bring in more tax revenue, the HMRC has recently awarded contracts to a number of debt collecting agencies to chase upto £1.5bn in unpaid taxes. As part of our investigation, Dispatches decided to look at some of these firm. One company that won a contract to collect £100m in unpaid taxes was Apex Credit Management Ltd, which is based in Stratford-upon-Avon.

But once again, inquiries quickly began to reveal it was not as simple as that. A corporate ownership structure emerged that revealed Apex Credit Management Ltd was ultimately controlled by a firm based offshore in Guernsey. While this is all perfectly legal, tax campaigners might ask if it's appropriate for HMRC to award a contract to collect UK takes to company whose main corporate owner is located in a tax haven. 

HMRC told us that Apex was registered in the UK and won its contract through a proper tender process. It added there was no legal reasons to exclude them."

Tax does have to be taxing.




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TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise



Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

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Monday, 21 May 2012

HMRC Exodus



Accountancylive reports that HMRC is facing a skills shortage, something loyal readers have  repeatedly warned about on this site.

It seems that HMRC is facing an exodus of senior tax specialists, an exodus that is gathering pace at an "alarming rate":
"as 80% of the organisation’s top team are set to flee the departmental nest this summer."
I wonder if the word "nest" is really the best description of HMRC?

Anyhoo, the article goes on to list some familiar names who are leaving (no surprises to loyal readers of this site):
  • Steve Lamey, director-general for benefits and credit, is taking up a new role in the private sector while three of the five commissioners are retiring.
  •  HMRC is looking for a replacement for Mike Clasper.
  •  Lin Homer has only been in post for less than six months
  •  Director of customer and strategy, Naomi Ferguson, is to head up New Zealand’s tax authority in July.

As the article points out, the irony is that Dave Hartnett was the only commissioner in HMRC with ‘deep tax knowledge’. However, HMRC are looking to plug the gaps.

An HMRC spokesperson said:
"The most important aspect of this recruitment process is getting the right people for the right roles.

Applications will be welcome from both internal and external candidates in a fair and open competition. 

Replacements will need to have a range of experience for such senior roles; tax will be one of the key elements."
Glad to see that tax is a "key element" in the recruitment process!

Anyhoo, I dare say that Hartnett could be persuaded to come back as a consultant if the fees were right?

Tax does have to be taxing.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise



Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Tuesday, 24 April 2012

HMRC's Porkie Pie

I was gemused to read an article by Tony Hetherington, in which he lambastes HMRC's executive structure.

One particular issue he raised concerned Mike Clasper (the semi invisible Chairman of HMRC). Hetherington asked HMRC whether anyone represents "ordinary PAYE taxpayers" on HMRC's board.

The answer from HMRC was rather interesting in that, for reasons best known to themselves, HMRC lied.

Quote:
"Our chairman is also chairman of Which?"
 That's grand, except that Clasper isn't chairman of Which?

Clasper is not even a member of its governing council, instead he chairs an offshoot company (Which? Limited) that handles the commercial activities of Which?, but not Which? consumer campaigns.

Why did HMRC lie about something that could be (and was) so easily checked and proven to be wrong?


Tax does have to be taxing.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise



Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Thursday, 24 November 2011

Calling All Agents II - Deja Vu



In October I wrote about the ICAEW's and HMRC's appeal for tax agent firms to allow HMRC to come and see how things are done at the coal face:

"Michael Izza, the CEO of the ICAEW, has issued a public call for tax agent firms to allow HMRC staff to come and see what it is like at the "coal face" and visit the firms to observe procedures etc. HMRC have assured the ICAEW that there are no risks to the firms (or the clients of the firms) if they allow HMRC staff to come and visit."

Later, that same month, I quoted Clapser:

"HMRC has committed to a big challenge. However, improvements can only be made with the input of the profession and it is therefore important that firms come forward to volunteer to host HMRC staff. Council members are strongly encouraged to do so, and take their opportunity to share their experiences."

I then stated:

"I would note one thing, not everyone is of the view that there is such a cosy relationship between HMRC and the profession.

Anthony Thomas, President of the Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT), recently debunked the nonsense that there is a "special relationship" between HMRC and the professional bodies, calling it a "myth" (akin to that "relationship" between the UK and US governments).

 
This view may ruffle a few feathers over at the ICAEW, where Michael Izza (the CEO) claims that "we (the ICAEW) now have a partnership with HMRC".
 
Moving forward to the present, I was more than gemused to read on Nichola Ross Martin's site that the "visit the coalface" idea has been done before (even to the extent of visiting the very same tax agent!).

Ironically, neither HMRC or the ICAEW seem to remember this!

Here is Nichola's article in full, in the hope that it jogs the memories of both HMRC and ICAEW.
 
"We have a case of déjà vu: as part of the latest Agent Strategy HMRC are visiting firms to see what it is really like in practice. Hold on, hasn't that been tried already? Read on and see if you can spot the difference.
In 2008 HMRC director’s general of business tax – Melanie Dawes visited West Country firm A C Mole and Sons to “see what it is like for us - and experience the practical effects of HMRC's Change Programme as we do…” Paul Aplin, a partner in the firm and chairman of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) Tax Faculty enthused on his blog “I think that it completely changed the way she viewed our issues.”

Roll on three years, we now learn that HMRC’s director general of personal tax – Stephen Banyard, has just returned from a visit to... West Country firm A C Mole and Sons, speaking to staff and receiving feedback. Paul Aplin, a partner in the firm but now ex-chairman of the ICAEW Tax Faculty reports, “I think he went away with a better understanding of the problems we encounter.”

So, assuming that Mr Banyard has not taken a leaf out of his boss’ book (Dave Hartnett, “the most wined and dined mandarin of Whitehall”) and was not really taking the opportunity for a day out of London sampling local cuisine, we must conclude that the visit was really useful. Sad to say that judging by the effect that Ms Dawes previous visit seems to have had it is unlikely to create any noticeable changes for tax agents. We all agree that service levels and standards have spiralled into a lamentable decline in the past three years.

Probably the most embarrassing thing for both HMRC and the ICAEW is that three years ago after the Dawes' visit, Paul had also managed to tete a tete with HMRC's Chairman Mike Clasper. ”When I met Mike Clasper, last week I told him what it was like at the coalface - the wasted time dealing with piles of incorrect PAYE coding notices and the frustration and embarrassment caused by incorrect penalty notices…We spoke one to one - no officials present - for almost an hour and a half and I felt that I received a fair hearing…”

Not that any of what happened three years ago appears to have had any effect on service standards or agent relationships.

The acid test is probably whether members of the Parliamentary Accounts Committee (PAC) who are investigating the rolling saga of the combination of HMRC’s Permanent Secretary’s blunders with large business, together with HMRC's value for money and falling service standards will take heed and give Mr Clasper a prod. Why on earth do a one to one with the ICAEW's top tax man and do nothing?

It is of course too late to ask Melanie Dawes, she has now jumped ship to the Cabinet Office following a previous grilling by the PAC in September. Mike Norgrave has just been appointed to take her place, obviously, he cannot be held accountable."





Tax does have to be taxing.

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To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

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Tuesday, 25 October 2011

An Inspector Calls II - Clasper Speaks

On 10th October I wrote the following:

"The ICAEW reports that Mike Clasper (Charmian of HMRC) popped in to ICAEW Council last week for a wee chat.

Clasper told members that improving service standards and the "customer" experience were priorities for the department. He also stressed the importance of 2012 to HMRC as a number of changes are implemented.


This is his first visit to Council and he acknowledged the difficulties that have existed within HMRC since the merger between Customs and Excise and the Inland Revenue. He also stated that HMRC plans to become more efficient, increase tax revenue and improve the "customer" (ugh, the "C" word again!) experience
."

The wheels within the ICAEW sometimes grind rather slowly. However, after a wee bit of gentle pushing from me, the ICAEW has published a summary of what Clasper actually said at the meeting.

Here it is:

"hmrc service standards and tax agent strategy
  
HMRC’s Chairman, Mike Clasper, and Brian Redford, Deputy Director, Business Customer & Strategy, attended the October Council meeting to discuss service standards and the recently published consultation on Tax Agent Strategy.

The decline in service standards is one of the biggest concerns currently being mentioned by the ICAEW membership. Following a highly critical report by the Treasury Select Committee published in July 2011, a meeting was held in September 2011 between HMRC’s senior management and the professional bodies and various charities to discuss what should be done to help make improvements. 
 
It was chaired by Mike Clasper and following the meeting a joint statement was published, setting out plans for HMRC to work with the professions and charities to make improvements. Tax Agents have a critical role to play and need a strong relationship with HMRC. At the moment there is a lack of trust that needs to be addressed.

There is understandable concern that promises have been made in the past to improve service standards but they have not been realised. However, the joint statement marks a turning point and shows that HMRC has picked up the challenge issued by the Treasury Select Committee to work with the profession to make improvements.

The biggest problems highlighted are post and telephone handling. The challenge for HMRC and the profession is to jointly understand the nature of the problem, develop solutions to improve the service and find performance measures that accurately reflect the customer experience.

Background
In the past, there have been different views as to how HMRC should recognise agents, with some feeling that the focus of attention should be on the tax payer. HMRC are now clear that strategically the role of the agent should be recognised in addition to the role played by the customer and there is a genuine intention on the part of HMRC to improve relationships with agents.

With the launch of HMRC in 2005, there was a loss of confidence in the organisation from customers as it was felt that it did not have a clear customer centric focus. The foundations for the merger were solid enough. It offered one tax authority for business which is a huge enabler for a customer-centric organisation, a system of dealing with large businesses that is globally competitive and a vast amount of knowledge about tax payers. However, the merger did not fully resolve the cultural differences between the two organisations and needed to deliver efficiency savings at the same time as facilitating a smooth transition from a local to a national organisation.

Following the merger, HMRC’s strategic objectives included:

-       Closing the tax gap
-       Focusing on the customer experience
-       Providing value for money
-       Operating with professionalism

In the 2010 spending review, along with all government departments HMRC was charged with cutting costs by a further 25%, but reinvestment back into HMRC was agreed with a primary focus on closing the tax gap and improving compliance.
 
In order to achieve HMRC’s strategic goals, there has to be a balance between three key and often conflicting aims:

1.    The tax has to be collected
2.    The customer experience has to be good
3.    HMRC has to be efficient

2010 – A difficult year

Mike acknowledged that 2010 was a difficult year and had said so on the record, but that it had to be seen in context. For HMRC employees, existing systems and processes were becoming outmoded and as configured were not able to provide a single view of a PAYE customer on its systems and this required expensive manual intervention. The system designed to support PAYE was based on 13 regionally defined databases meaning that some people had several records, some of which had not been linked and led to bad data quality and inconsistency. Working with this dated system, people developed ways of getting the right result without inputting the right data which led to further problems. HMRC underestimated the problems that would arise in the move to the new national PAYE system (NPS) and the resources that were needed to tackle them. These problems were only made worse by the resulting high volume of telephone calls that taxpayers and agents made to HMRC.

A related problem was the growing backlog for reconciling PAYE exceptions, which by 2010 had reached 23 million open cases, a problem that dated back to 1983. It was proving impossible to tackle this backlog with the existing systems.

The current situation

Mike explained that over the last few months there had been a considerable turnaround in performance and customers were starting to see the benefits of the NPS investment and other operational changes. Customer contact has improved. This year 70% of calls, on average, are answered within 40 seconds which is a massive improvement on the previous year.

Postal response times are the best they have been since the merger. The average is less than 15 days – calculated from the day the post arrives at HMRC through to when it is posted on HMRC’s system and a response sent. However, Mike accepted that this is not translating to the customer experience and this needs to be addressed. HMRC is also working with its mail partners, Fujitsu and Royal Mail, to cut delays once correspondence leaves HRMC.  But Mike acknowledged that there is more to do in improving the customer experience.

Internally, work is being done to improve professionalism and quality. Training and development is an essential part of this. HMRC is supporting professionalism through the establishment of ‘The Tax Academy’, accredited by Manchester Metropolitan University. This year, some 200 members of staff will commence their training through the academy for full technical training, although it is acknowledged that a wider section of the workforce will undertake other training and continuing professional development.  HMRC recognise some 18,000 members of staff as tax professionals.

Teams have been empowered to improve their own processes through ‘Pacesetter’ methodology and already an improvement in productivity of up to 60% has been seen in some areas.

Work is also being done to cut down on the organisation’s hierarchy. There have been up to 14 approval levels, from frontline staff up to CEO. By March next year there will be no more than eight. The top four tiers of the organisation have also been reviewed. 45% of jobs have been competed with a number filled externally to revitalise the structure and overall numbers reduced.

Up to 8,000 members of staff are also moving from processing to compliance roles in the coming years, which will help to balance the three requirements to achieving strategic goals.

On the performance challenge, HMRC staff members have received the training needed to enable them to go out and observe Tax Agents in their own firms to get a first-hand view of the problems that they are experiencing. HMRC now needs the profession to volunteer to host their staff and help improve standards. At the moment, it was proving difficult to recruit volunteer firms and Mike requested that ICAEW did all they could to promote this initiative. Since the Council meeting a significant number of  ICAEW members and others have stepped forward and the visits are will commence as planned.

Tax Agent Strategy
Allowing agents to ‘self serve’ through an online system should improve the process. By enrolling and understanding the business profiles of tax agents, it will be possible to tailor communication and support.

Through this system, HMRC will now be able to look at all interactions with agents. If there are consistent problems, they can then work with the agents to make improvements, a mutually beneficial process.
 
Conclusion
HMRC has committed to a big challenge. However, improvements can only be made with the input of the profession and it is therefore important that firms come forward to volunteer to host HMRC staff. Council members are strongly encouraged to do so, and take their opportunity to share their experiences.
 
For further information, please contact Frank Haskew, Head of the Tax Faculty, frank.haskew@icaew.com "
Well then, Clasper sounds quite optimistic!

I have been publishing this site for several years now, and accept that I may at times be "jaundiced" in my views as to whether there is any genuine improvement or merely scratching around at the edges of the issues facing HMRC.

Therefore I would welcome opinions from my loyal readers (HMRC staff and non HMRC staff) on the above, and as to whether it is a fair reflection of reality.

I would note one thing, not everyone is of the view that there is such a cosy relationship between HMRC and the profession.

Anthony Thomas, President of the Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT), recently debunked the nonsense that there is a "special relationship" between HMRC and the professional bodies, calling it a "myth" (akin to that "relationship" between the UK and US governments).
 
This view may ruffle a few feathers over at the ICAEW, where Michael Izza (the CEO) claims that "we (the ICAEW) now have a partnership with HMRC".
 



Tax does have to be taxing.

UK EXPATS: Reduce tax on UK Pensions
HMRC QROPS provider. Unlock your UK pension and access a 25% lump sum today.

Quote ID code "ABC" when contacting a QROPS specialist.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Monday, 1 August 2011

HMRC Put The F Into Failure

Failure
Well then, what a "giddy" world it is in HMRC!

For many years this site has been pointing out the inefficiencies and failures of HMRC, comments from staff and loyal readers show that the edifice that is HMRC is crumbling day by day.

Finally those with some alleged "control" over HMRC (ie the politicians) have woken up to the ongoing car crash that is HMRC.

On 30th July (a Saturday for some reason, surely not trying to hide the report were they?) the Treasury Select Committee published a report into the administration and effectiveness of HMRC.

Unsurprisingly it found that there is considerable dissatisfaction among the public and tax professionals with the service provided by the Department. The committee is concerned that if this continues it may undermine respect for the tax system.

Quite!

Serious concerns were reported in a number of areas, all of which have featured many times on this site, including:

- Unacceptable difficulties contacting HMRC by phone during peak periods
- Endemic delays in responding to post
- An increasing focus on online communication that may exclude those without reliable internet access

"we do not accept the Department's explanation that these problems are primarily the result of reconciling of multiple PAYE tax years at once. There is a serious risk that if communicating with HMRC becomes too time-consuming, difficult and expensive, respect for the tax system, and with it voluntary compliance, may be undermined....

The National Insurance and PAYE Service should ultimately make PAYE work more effectively and ensure efficiencies across the Department. However, the problems resulting from its flawed implementation have done significant damage to the public perception of HMRC and the tax system more generally...

Implementing RTI before the system and its interface into HMRC have been properly tested could led to greater delays later on and further damage public confidence in the Department and the tax system. ...

HMRC operates under significant pressures. It has to implement increasingly complex tax legislation, sometimes developed without full account of the practical consequences, whilst undergoing restructuring, delivering substantial resource reductions and job cuts....

We received disturbing evidence of job cuts being made before the efficiencies that were intended to enable them had been delivered, and of a culture of command and control that disengages staff and prevents potential problems from being dealt with effectively. ...

Whilst staff remain dedicated to their work despite the pressures HMRC is under, they have little confidence in the leadership of the Department or that change will be for the better. This has been a long-running problem for the Department. Whilst senior management are very aware of the problem and have made efforts to improve engagement, there has been little evidence of any positive impact to date.
"

The committee made recommendations in the following areas:

- Improving the service provided by contact centres, particularly in relation to escalating complex queries and providing alternatives to 0845 numbers
- Providing robust alternative to online contact, including more cost-effective ways of providing face-to-face advice
- Ensuring greater awareness of the impact of process changes on individuals and businesses, in particular recommending senior staff spend time with tax practices, charities and businesses
- Ensuring reductions in resources are managed in a way that is commensurate with the enabling IT and process improvements and minimises the loss of Departmental tax expertise
- Reviewing the division of responsibilities between HMRC and HM Treasury in relation to making tax policy, to ensure practical considerations are taken into account at the earliest possible stage
- Better targeting of letters that threaten serious consequences against individuals
- Having the National Audit Office externally audit preparations for Real-time Information, to ensure Ministers can be held accountable for progress against the Government’s ambitious timetable
- Examining how the Department can achieve better accountability around the settlement of large tax cases

Loyal readers will find none of the above at all surprising. The only real surprise is that it has taken this long for someone to officially admit (albeit politicians passing the buck) that there is something wrong.

Oddly enough Dame Lesley Strathie is off on 3 months sick leave. Thus leaving the response/excuse to Clasper.

Here is what he said to the BBC:

"Stand back and look at the other side of the equation..., receipts £468 billion, £33 billion than more than the year before..." (BBC

All very nice, maybe. Except that there is one small fly in his oinkment.

In 2007-08 receipts were £461.6 billion (only £6.4 billion difference between this year and 2008). Receipts were in fact falling since 2007/08, and are only back now to where they were before.

Anyhoo, as noted many times on this site, the fundamental problems wrt HMRC stem from a.o.:

- insufficient resources of the right quality in the right place
- a botched merger
- lousy management (appointed by management)
- an absurdly complex tax system etc etc.

All of the above issues are in the remit of the politicians, until the politicians get their act together and admit responsibility this mess will never be sorted out. Unfortunately the politicians will not do this, and will continue to pass the buck.

Things will only get worse!

Tax does have to be taxing.

UK EXPATS: Reduce tax on UK Pensions
HMRC QROPS provider. Unlock your UK pension and access a 25% lump sum today.

Quote ID code "ABC" when contacting a QROPS specialist.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Friday, 18 March 2011

HMRC Not In A Great Place - The Pride and The Passion Updated

Here, according to Accountancy Age, is the reality behind the HMRC intranet spin (see today's earlier artcile) of the public scolding of Strathie et al:

"LIKE A NAUGHTY SCHOOLKID, the taxman appeared before the Treasury select committee. Chairman Mike Clasper knew his role well, taking heed of headmaster George Mudie's words that HM Revenue & Customs must do better. As such, Mudie welcomed his tactic of agreeing with everything the committee said and he was spared the cane.

Not so lucky was HMRC chief executive Dame Leslie Strathie. After batting away many of headmaster Mudie's questions fairly successful, he finally pulled her up in the middle of her analysis of HMRC's performance for her use of "I think...".

"You keep saying that," he told her. "I'm asking you whether HMRC's performance is improving, yet you are only telling me what you think is the case. You should know these things. You are the chief executive. You should know whether it is getting better, getting worse, or staying the same. If you do not know, then you are not doing your job properly."

Thoroughly scolded, Dame Leslie took his words on board. Shunning the phrase she had been told off for, she adopted a change of tack. "I believe...", she started. Needless to say, the headmaster did not take kindly to this.
"

Tax does have to be taxing.

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To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Thursday, 17 March 2011

HMRC Not In A Great Place - The Pride and The Passion



My thanks to a loyal reader who sent me a hand typed copy of the latest HMRC intranet posting. This one covers the recent evidence given by HMRC senior staff to the Treasury Select Committee.

Here it is as sent to me, if there are minor errors/omissions please let me know and I will correct them:

"HMRC's senior team have given evidence covering the whole range of HMRC's work to a committee of MP's

Contact centre performance, morale and engagement, PAYE and tax settlements with big business all featured in the Treasury Select Committee meeting yesterday afternoon.

Chief executive Lesley Straithie, non-executive chairman Mike Clasper, permanent secretary for tax Dave Hartnett and chief finance officer Simon Bowles all took part in the three-hour hearing.

They agreed with the committee that HMRC has to do a better on both customer service, especially call waiting times, and staff engagement.

Lesley told the committee: "I want to make a plug for our staff here - the great thing we have to build on in HMRC is their pride and passion in their work and their determination to provide good service for their customers".

She said the Department needed to "paint a picture of hope" - especially around skills and career development, something which had come out strongly in discussions with the trade unions.

She added: "I really do believe that people need to understand just how committed and passionate our people are in their work - even if they think HMRC hasn't always helped them do it".

When it came to customer service, the team told the committee that it was unlikely to improve radically until PAYE had been stabilised.

The problems experienced with PAYE and the knock-on effects on HMRC's call centres and customer service were, they stressed, the result of working across eight years in the current year, following the introduction of the National Insurance and PAYE Service (NPS)
___________________________________________________________________________________________________

[...the great thing we have to build on in HMRC is [our staff's] pride and passion in the work... Lelsey Strathie]

The backlog of open cases will be cleared by the end of 2012 and the Department will be in a "much stronger position" by 2013 and "stronger again" in 2014.

Meanwhile, accuracy for the current annual coding cycle is at 97 percent - up from 80 per cent last year. However, they cautioned there would inevitably be "ups and downs" despite the steady improvement.

The work being done to manage demand in contact centres is a key part of this - especially encouraging people to use online services instead of making unnecessary calls.

Lesley added: "The satisfaction level when you speak to our staff is very high. People speak very highly of contact centre agents when they get to speak to them."

While the aim is to provide a high-quality telephone service for those who want it, the future will involve more outreach work, home visits to the elderly and more on the internet.

The team also told the committee about the changes taking place within the Department, including the work to improve leadership and revealed they will cut the number of layers from 13 to either seven or eight.

Discussion also focused on the £917m of reinvestment to focus on avoidance, evasion and criminal attack, which will bring in an extra £7bn by 2015. When this target is met, they argued, there would be a case for going back to the Treasury with business cases to ask for further investment.

Despite the challenges the Department has faced, they stressed the compliance yield had risen significantly - by more than £5bn in four years.

Settlements with big business were also discussed, especially the Vodafone case and Dave Hartnett gave a forensic analysis showing why the much-quoted £6bn liability was an "absurd figure which no serious or reputable tax specialist would support".

More information

A full transcript of the meeting, which covered many other topics, will be published on the HMRC intranet as soon as it is available.
"

The HMRC Intranet article appears to have missed some "nuances", as per media reports elsewhere, Mike Clasper told the Treasury select committee that he was not happy about the level of service that HMRC had been providing.

Clasper is quoted by Accountancy Age:

"I think there will be a period of steady improvement.

We're not going to be in a great place until 2013 and we'll be stronger again in 2014.
"

He admitted that employees were disenchanted with the work itself and that the civil service "does not like change or manage change well" and HMRC "has not given people that need to make change the tools they need".

Dame Leslie Strathie apologised to customers (taxpayers) for poor service.

Well then, over to HMRC staff now for their thoughts and comments.

Tax does have to be taxing.

UK EXPATS: Reduce tax on UK Pensions
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Quote ID code "ABC" when contacting a QROPS specialist.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Thursday, 16 September 2010

Hartnett Speaks II - HMRC Backs Down

Dave Hartnett
Oh dear it has been a "testing" few days from those "running" HMRC, hasn't it?

"Dame" Lesley Strathie (will someone please tell me why this person has been "Damed"?) and Dave Hartnett had to appear before the Treasury Select Committee yesterday for some ritual humiliation.

As a result of this, and Treasury orders, HMRC have now done a U turn and said that interest will not be charged on the tax underpayments caused by HMRC coding cock ups over the last two years.

Dame Lesley said:

"If they need time to pay, they won't pay interest. Ministers have asked us to put that in place."

As long as people facing a repayment contact HMRC to agree a timetable, no interest will be incurred.

Andrew Tyrie, the committee chairman, said:

"The fact that you have announced this today does look like a direct response to public pressure."

Quite!

Interestingly HMRC's upper echelons were told about the latest underpayments in July, yet the public only informed last week.

Funny though that the policy reversal re interest has only been cobbled together now, in the face of widespread ridicule and condemnation?

One would have thought that HMRC executives could have foreseen all of this, and had a plan in place to avoid the shambles that has been unfolding before our eyes over the last few days?

Hartnett said that he regretted his "insensitivity" in not recognising immediately that people affected deserved an apology. He went on to apologise for not apologising immediately the issue became public.

"I know how to apologise, I've had to do it before.

(Ken's reaction...ROFLOL!)

I did not do it then and I am sorry for that.

I think we could have done better in helping taxpayers to prepare for this
."

Hartnett also apologised for how he handled the BBC Moneybox interview.

(Quotes sourced from The Telegraph)

The sad thing is that this is but the tip of the iceberg; other things will come out and, like a West End farce, this farce will run and run.

BTW, where's "Three days a Week" Clasper gone?

Tax does have to be taxing.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Monday, 13 September 2010

Hartnett Speaks

Dave Hartnett
Dave Hartnett, HMRC's permanent secretary for tax, managed to put his foot in his mouth over the weekend.

He kicked off by refusing to apologise for the oncoming storm of extra demands for tax from HMRC, resulting from their well publicised cock up over tax over/underpayments that affect between 6-10 million people.

Hartnett denied there had been any errors, and said he saw no need to apologise.

The Guardian quoted him from BBC Radio 4's Money Box programme:

"I'm not sure I see a need to apologise.

I've read the papers, listened to the media and heard stories of HMRC blunder and IT failure – neither of those are true.

Every country that I know of that has deduction of tax from wages and salaries has to do a reconciliation at the end of each year and we're doing one.

I don't think we are extraordinary. Once or twice in the past the numbers have been very large – sometimes they're less. It depends on how the system has been operated and what issues there have been. We didn't get it wrong. This needs to be reconciled.

We're going to be as sympathetic as we can to anyone who comes to us and says you're trying to take too much money too fast.

If the results of the exercise we're now engaged in show that there are aspects of our plans which are not going to work well for the work we're trying to do or for our customers, we will consider changing them.

I am addressing the issue and I think the nation needs me to do just that.
"

Tory MP Ian Liddell-Grainger, who chairs the all-party parliamentary group on taxation, thought that Hartnett was talking bollocks wrt the claim that the repayment demands were not due to any "mistake" by the authorities.

Warnings had been ignored for years that the system was not "up to it", he said – accusing Hartnett of showing the typical "arrogance" of senior civil servants.

"It is a mistake. We have been warning for a long time that structurally this is not up to it. It comes down to a 21st century computer system and a 1940s PAYE system."

(Source Telegraph)

I would point out that in the real world Dave those who have, through no fault of their own, underpaid tax (because they assumed that HMRC had got the figures right) will have spent the money on "luxuries" such as food, rent and heating.

Anyhoo, a few hours is a long time in farces.

Within hours of refusing to apologise Hartnett, having been subjected to a barrage of criticism from taxpayers and MPs (George Osborne, the Chancellor, was said to have been incandescent, Lord Oakeshott said Hartnett's response made the BP chief, Tony Hayward, "look like a model of disaster management" adding that Hartnett was "in a world of his own; I wonder what planet he is on? This is the latest in a series of management failures in the HMRC going back many years. If Mr Hartnett cannot see why he should apologise for this one, then he really should be reconsidering his own position."), issued an apology.

He said that he was "deeply sorry that people are facing an unexpected bill.

Everyone in HMRC is working hard to make this as painless as possible.

I apologise if my remarks came across as insensitive. I am working flat out with my colleagues to ensure everyone's tax is correct and the new computer system will help us do this.

It was this new system that revealed the extent and size of reconciliations required – and will help us be more accurate in future – but we do not underestimate the distress caused to taxpayers and, once again, I apologise.
".

(Source The Independent)

As to whether Hartnett really meant it, or was merely acting under orders is another matter.

As to why Hartnett (when he was head of the IR inquiry branch he was personally responsible for leading the HMRC investigation into Ken Dodd's tax affairs in the 1980's - you will recall HMRC lost that one when it went to court), Clasper (who works 2 days a week for HMRC) and "Dame" Strathie (and other senior executives of HMRC) are still in their jobs is something that our "beloved" political masters can answer (but probably won't).

Were these people to be removed/step down, their replacements would doubtless be highly skilled in political spin but lacking the necessary management skills/experience to turn HMRC around.

Frankly speaking it is my belief that, in its current form, HMRC is beyond redemption.

My advice is to undo the merger of IR and Customs, take away responsibility for administering tax credits (or simply replace them with a higher rate personal allowance) then work from there to massively simplify the tax system.

(Factoid: the donkey in the picture is called Dilbert - my thanks to the loyal reader who sent me Dilbert's photo and gave me permission to use it - Dilbert wishes to make it clear than any physical resemblance to Hartnett is an unfortunate coincidence).

Tax does have to be taxing.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Monday, 5 July 2010

Money Well Spent


As the pay of civil servants is frozen (though apparently not the bonus pot) in order to help the country's battered finances, Citywire reported last week that seven directors of HMRC earned up to £1.24M in pay and benefits last year.

The best paid civil servant at HMRC was director general of benefits and credits, Steve Lamey, who was paid between £205,000 and £209,999. The chairman of HMRC, Mike Clasper, was paid between £150,000 and £154,999 for working three days a week.

Tax does have to be taxing.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Monday, 4 January 2010

Staying Power

Staying PowerHaving joined HMRC in August 2008 as Chairman, Mike Clasper has now become an Non Executive Director of ITV (the company that gave us "Taking on The Taxman").

Clearly he must feel that the role of Chairman of HMRC is not that demanding.

For you see loyal readers, he holds down more than two roles (he was also recently appointed Chairman of Which?).

As per HMRC:

"Mike is a Non-Executive Director at ITV plc and Chairman of the West London Working Consortium. He has also recently been appointed Chairman of Which, a non-executive part-time post of two days a month."

I assume that none of these roles brings with it a conflict of interest?

Tax does have to be taxing.

Professional Cover Against the Threat of Costly TAX and VAT Investigations

What is TAXWISE?

TAXWISE is a tax-fee protection service that will pay up to £75,000 towards your accountant's fees in the event of an HM Revenue & Customs full enquiry or dispute.

To find out more, please use this link Taxwise

Tax Investigation for Dummies, by Nick Morgan, provides a good and easy to read guide for anyone caught up in an HMRC tax investigation. A must read for any Self Assessment taxpayer.

Click the link to read about: Tax Investigation for Dummies

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

Judge Judy

Adjudication
Congratulations to Judy Clements OBE, who has recently been appointed by Mike Clasper Chairman of HMRC to take over from Dame Barbara Mills as Adjudicator from 20th April.

The role of the Adjudicator is to provide an "independent investigation of complaints that HMRC are unable to resolve".

How can the Adjudicator fulfil that independent role if the Adjudicator is selected and appointed by HMRC themselves?

Tax does have to be taxing.

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Wednesday, 28 January 2009

It's Official - HMRC Is Shite

WTF
The Treasury - First Report

Administration and expenditure of the Chancellor's departments, 2007-08

Published January 2009

Indicates that Parliament also believes that HMRC is shite:

"We are disappointed that HRMC took 12 months to replace its Chief Executive, thereby deepening the uncertainty felt by staff members already part way through a far reaching review of HMRC's operations. We recommend that the Government ensure a full permanent senior management team is in place in HMRC as soon as possible..

We believe that having a 'Permanent Secretary for Tax' alongside the Chief Executive and Chairman of HMRC may obscure clear lines of accountability. We recommend that HMRC publish and widely circulate clear information on the respective responsibilities of its senior management team, including responsibility for data management...

It is our view that HMRC's explanation of the basis for the payment to Stuart Cruickshank is wholly inadequate. We are further unconvinced that the £88,125 received by Stuart Cruickshank represents good value for the taxpayer. We recommend that the Government ensure that all departments are adhering to best practice regarding ex-gratia payments...

We note the National Audit Office's assertion that, in order to maximise the benefits of its Transformation Programme, HMRC must convince staff of its benefits. The low levels of morale within the Department are startling with profound potential impacts on both the Transformation Programme and core service delivery. We will continue to monitor the efforts made by senior management to improve matters. We seek an explanation of how Ministers will monitor and report progress...

We are concerned that individuals without access to the internet, notably less well off or elderly taxpayers, may face increased levels of non-filing penalty charges following the revision to the paper filing deadline. We recommend that the Government should publish any analysis available to it of the demographic profile of those facing non-filing fees following the 31 October paper filing deadline. If such evidence is not available to the Government then it should be commissioned as a matter of urgency...

We recommend that HMRC disclose information regarding the financial case for individual office closures in order to allow better public scrutiny of these decisions...

We ask the Government to update the latest progress made by HMRC against Kieran Poynter's recommendations regarding information security...

We are extremely concerned by the level of fraud within HMRC. We will continue to monitor the steps taken to improve controls...

We recommend that the Government ensure the performance against agreed targets by PFI contractors is published within Departmental Annual Reports in order to enable clearer scrutiny of these recipients of public funds...

We recommend that HMRC reviews the contracts with its IT provider in the light of the very serious errors which have recently occurred and seeks financial compensation where appropriate. We regard it as wholly unsatisfactory that people entitled to Child Trust Fund payments should not have received them owing to the poor performance of an IT contractor. We seek assurances that the contracts drawn up with the PFI companies adequately allow for appropriate compensation to the taxpayer in the event of serious performance shortcomings...

We note that the introduction of HMRC's new IT system has been delayed by a year. We accept that postponing the 'go live' date until testing is complete is prudent. HMRC should publish the performance targets for the new system in terms of reduced open cases and other measures so that we may better monitor its effectiveness.
"

Tax does have to be taxing.

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Thursday, 13 November 2008

New Head of HR

Morale
Accountancy Age reports that Mike Clasper (one of the "committee of three" running HMRC) is to recruit a new head of HR for HMRC.

As noted, the job spec requires the new HR head to inspire the thousands of demoralised staff whilst making a few thousand redundant.

Any takers?

Tax does have to be taxing.

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"