The sheer volume and intricacies of the 2007/08 Finance Bill, published on Thursday by the UK Government, adds to tax complexity, according to the ACCA (the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants).
Chas Roy-Chowdhury, ACCA’s head of taxation, explained that:
“The Treasury’s explanatory notes for the Finance Bill alone run into 1,148 pages but the actual Bill is 113 sections long and approximately 440 pages in total."
“Every year, the Bill becomes more complex and the volume of tax policy increases. The devil is truly in the detail when it comes to trawling through this Bill and the fundamental elements of a good tax system - fairness and clarity - are often too hard to track down simply because of the Bill’s bulk.”
He went on to add that:
“Simplification is desperately needed; an independent Tax Policy Committee, modelled on the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, would help to remove complexity. Such a body would make for an efficient UK tax system – one which is stable, certain, simple and fair.”
The Finance Bill brought into law a number of business and personal taxation issues which were highlighted in the Budget on March 12th, detailed below with ACCA comment:
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