Tax Avoidance: The Role of Large Accountancy Firms, Forty-fourth Report of Session 2012-13, Report, Together with Formal Minutes, Oral and...

Tax Avoidance: The Role of Large Accountancy Firms, Forty-fourth Report of Session 2012-13, Report, Together with Formal Minutes, Oral and...
ISBN-10
0215056981
ISBN-13
9780215056986
Category
Business & Economics
Pages
60
Language
English
Published
2013-04-26
Publisher
The Stationery Office
Author
Great Britain: Parliament: House of Commons: Committee of Public Accounts

Description

Among those ranged against HMRC are the big four accountancy firms, Deloitte, Ernst and Young, KPMG, and PwC, which earn £2 billion each year from their tax work in the UK. They employ nearly 9,000 people just to provide tax advice aimed at minimizing the tax paid. Between them they boast 250 transfer pricing specialists whereas HMRC has only 65 people working in this area. The firms declare that their focus is now on acceptable tax planning and not aggressive tax avoidance however they continue to sell complex tax avoidance schemes with as little as 50 per cent chance of succeeding if challenged in court. The large accountancy firms are in a powerful position in the tax world and have an unhealthily cosy relationship with government. They second staff to the Treasury to advise on formulating tax legislation. When those staff return to their firms, they have the very inside knowledge and insight to be able to identify loopholes in the new legislation and advise their clients on how to take advantage of them. This is a clear conflict of interest which should be banned in a code of conduct for tax advisers. The UK must also take the lead in demanding urgent reform of international tax law, so that companies have to pay a fair share of tax where they actually do business and make profits. Furthermore, the job of simplifying our tax code needs to be taken seriously; yet the Office of Tax Simplification has just 6 people working in it

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