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Tax Tip Newsletter, March 2007

GOING OUT IN STYLE? (Budget 2007 Analysis)

By Carl Bayley BSc ACA
Senior Consultant, Taxcafe.co.uk

 

On Wednesday 21st March 2007, the UK’s longest serving Chancellor of the Exchequer for almost two centuries delivered his 11th Budget Statement to a packed House of Commons and an anxious nation.

We are, of course, talking about Gordon Brown, heir apparent to Tony Blair’s throne and Budget 2007 was, perhaps, his last big chance to demonstrate his election-winning potential to his colleagues before the long-anticipated Labour leadership contest.

All of this was already well known before the Chancellor began his Budget speech in its new lunchtime slot at 12.30pm. What few people knew before that moment, however, was just what a radical shake-up he had in store for us. I, for one, had anticipated little else but political spin in the speech and reams of technical gobbledegook in the press releases which followed. (I’m the poor sap who has to read, digest and explain those press releases, after all!)

Well, I wasn’t entirely wrong; the speech certainly did contain its fair share of political spin. The Chancellor began with a few jokes about his long service in the post (he is the longest-serving Chancellor since 1827) and some interesting comments about his ‘comrades’ at the Treasury.

Josef Stalin?

But references to his earlier comparison with Josef Stalin soon faded away as he began to announce some fairly major tax reforms and even one or two headline tax cuts (more of that later). When he also announced that he was proposing to sell off £36 Billion in State-owned assets over the next three years, I began to wonder if the last twenty years had been just a dream and it was actually still 1987 after all.

Amazing, isn’t it, just when you think the Government has sold off everything they can, they still keep scraping up a few more things from the bottom of what must surely be an endless barrel. The student loan book, worth £6 Billion, is apparently now up for sale. It makes me wonder how long it will be before our sons and daughters find that they are now in debt to some rather unsavoury characters in New Jersey, Nevada or Sicily!

Amongst the political spin and flowing rhetoric, however, it must be admitted that this year’s Budget had more real substance than we have seen for several years. Taxation’s place at the heart of the Budget speech seemed to be restored after an enforced absence of several years. “If that’s the size of the tip”, I thought, “I’d better brace myself for the iceberg!” I wasn’t disappointed – as soon as the Chancellor had sat down, the Treasury immediately released a staggering 81 press releases together with more than 40 pages of Budget notes, more than 230 pages of technical material in all.

So it seems that for this, surely his last Budget, Gordon Brown has rediscovered the power of the tax system to win over the electorate (or so he must hope) and, as he closed his speech with the shock announcement of a two pence in the pound reduction in Income Tax, to its lowest rate in 75 years, I had to admit (grudgingly), that he is certainly going out in style!

But who is going to pay for it?

Income Tax & National Insurance: Jam Tomorrow?

In the immediate future, for the next tax year starting on 6th April 2007, we will see little change, with only the customary inflationary increases to personal allowances and tax rate bands:

Combining the personal allowance and the new basic rate band, we see that most people will only begin to pay higher rate Income Tax in 2007/8 when their income exceeds £39,825.

So, it’s pretty much business as usual for 2007/8. The following few years, however, will see some rather more significant changes:

Now, to the layman, that last point may not sound very radical. To me, however, it spells out the potential for a major change to the UK tax system: the abolition of National Insurance!

This is because of the fact that once the primary National Insurance threshold is aligned with the point at which higher rate Income Tax cuts in, for most people we will effectively have a simple two-tier tax system.

All basic rate taxpayers will also pay primary National Insurance contributions (currently 11% for employees and 8% for self-employed taxpayers) on all of their earned income and all higher rate taxpayers will be paying National Insurance at just 1% on their earned income in excess of the higher rate threshold. This will create just two effective tax rates from 2009/10 onwards. For employees these rates will be 31% and 41% and, for the self-employed, 28% and 41% (as things currently stand).

But, who knows, after 2009 we may see a total integration of the two taxes so that everyone pays 41% in higher rate tax and, perhaps, 31% in basic rate tax. Once the Income Tax and National Insurance thresholds are aligned this would be easy to do. The vast majority of the electorate, with mostly employment income, would not see much change, so it would be politically acceptable.

The self-employed, pensioners and landlords would all suffer effective tax increases however, as the benefit of paying lower, or no, National Insurance Contributions would be eradicated.

Amongst these groups, pensioners would generate the most sympathy, but we can see the counter-argument to that one coming already in the shape of higher age-related personal allowances.

OK, this is all speculation at present (but if Ladbrokes are giving odds on the abolition of National Insurance, put me down for a tenner). Piecing together what we do know, however, the tables below show the total annual tax bills on different types of income in the years ahead.

Employed Earners

The combined annual Income Tax and National Insurance burden for employed earners will be as follows:

Annual Earnings

Tax & National Insurance 2006/2007

Tax & National Insurance 2007/2008

Tax & National Insurance 2008/2009

Tax & National Insurance 2009/2010

£10,000

£1,380

£1,308

£1,434

£1,384

£20,000

£4,680

£4,608

£4,534

£4,484

£30,000

£7,980

£7,908

£7,634

£7,584

£40,000

£10,934

£10,724

£10,706

£10,684

£50,000

£15,034

£14,824

£14,611

£14,491

£50,000+

+ 41% of excess in each year

Amazingly enough, for a supposedly socialist Government, the only ones losing out here are the ones with the lowest income whose tax burden increases in 2008/9.

Gordon Brown will no doubt argue that increases in tax credits will more than compensate for this, but that won’t apply where the small wage is being received by the lower earner in a couple whose combined household income is too high for them to receive working tax credits.

Self-Employed Earners

We get slightly different figures for the self-employed, as follows:

Annual Earnings

Tax & National Insurance 2006/2007

Tax & National Insurance 2007/2008

Tax & National Insurance 2008/2009

Tax & National Insurance 2009/2010

£10,000

£1,232

£1,165

£1,295

£1,250

£20,000

£4,232

£4,165

£4,095

£4,050

£30,000

£7,232

£7,165

£6,895

£6,850

£40,000

£10,079

£9,835

£9,675

£9,650

£50,000

£14,179

£13,935

£13,580

£13,369

£50,000+

+ 41% of excess in each year

In addition to the above taxes, most self-employed earners also have to pay Class 2 National Insurance, which is increasing from £2.10 to £2.20 per week from 6 th April 2007.

Landlords

For those whose income is derived solely from rental income, the tax burden over the next few years will be as follows:

Rental Profits

Tax 2006/2007

Tax 2007/2008

Tax 2008/2009

Tax 2009/2010

£10,000

£834

£783

£925

£893

£20,000

£3,034

£2,983

£2,925

£2,893

£30,000

£5,234

£5,183

£4,925

£4,893

£40,000

£7,734

£7,414

£6,925

£6,893

£50,000

£11,734

£11,414

£10,730

£10,306

£50,000+

+ 40% of excess in each year

Remember that National Insurance Contributions are not due on rental income.

Pensioners

As explained above, there are some extra increases in allowances on the way for pensioners. Using the same principles as outlined above, the projected tax burden over the next few years for an unmarried pensioner aged between 65 and 74 is as follows:

Pension Income

Tax 2006/2007

Tax 2007/2008

Tax 2008/2009

Tax 2009/2010

£10,000

£340

£271

£210

£158

£20,000

£2,540

£2,471

£2,210

£2,158

£30,000

£5,234

£5,183

£4,925

£4,893

£40,000

£7,734

£7,414

£6,925

£6,893

£50,000

£11,734

£11,414

£10,730

£10,306

£50,000+

+ 40% of excess in each year

Tax Credits

Modest inflationary increases are to be made to the main elements of the Working Tax Credit and Child Tax Credit. The family element of £545 and ‘baby addition’ of £545 are, however, unchanged. Also unchanged are the two main income thresholds at which tax credits start to be withdrawn. For most families with combined household income of over £50,000 this therefore amounts to stealth taxation as inflationary forces will erode the value of the Tax Credits available.

For example, a family with household income of £55,000 in 2005/2006 will receive a tax credit of £212 during 2006/2007. Simply to keep pace with inflation, the same family will need income of £56,980 in 2006/2007 but would then receive a tax credit of only £80 during 2007/2008.

Further ahead, the income threshold at which working tax credit begins to be withdrawn is to be increased from £5,220 to £6,420 from 6 th April 2008. However, what the Chancellor gives, he can also take away, as the withdrawal rate will also increase from 37% to 39% from the same date.

Corporation Tax

Gordon Brown can’t seem to leave Corporation Tax alone. He brought in a 10% band in 2000, reduced it to a nil rate band in 2002, got cold feet and introduced a penalty on dividends paid by small companies in 2004, in 2006 he decide to put things back how they were and now, in 2007, he has made further major changes.

The main rate of Corporation Tax for large companies with annual profits in excess of £1.5M will reduce from 30% to 28% with effect from 1 st April 2008. (This, and all the other Corporation Tax and capital allowances reforms proposed in the Budget will not apply to companies operating in the North Sea ‘ring fence’ regime.)

“Great”, you’re saying, another tax cut. “Not so fast”, I say.

Yes, sure, large companies will be paying less Corporation Tax, but small companies with annual profits of £300,000 or less are to pay more.

The rate of Corporation Tax applying to companies with annual profits of no more than £300,000 is to increase form the present rate of 19% to 20% from 1 st April 2007, then 21% from 1 st April 2008, and then 22% from 1 st April 2009. In all, this will produce a 16% increase in the total Corporation Tax bill paid by the vast majority of companies in the UK.

So, whilst the Chancellor’s friends in big business can celebrate their tax cut, the vast majority of hard-working small company owners in the UK are being asked to pay for it with a 16% tax increase!

For companies with profits between £300,000 and £1.5M, there is an effective marginal rate band, which is currently 32.75%. The following table sets out the effective Corporation Tax rates over the next few years:

Company Profit Band:

2006/2007

2007/2008

2008/2009

2009/2010

Up to £300,000

19.00%

20.00%

21.00%

22.00%

£300,000 to £1.5M

32.75%

32.50%

29.75%

29.50%

Over £1.5M

30.00%

30.00%

28.00%

28.00%

The total Corporation Tax payable at various levels of profit will be as follows:

Company Profits:

2006/2007

2007/2008

2008/2009

2009/2010

£50,000

£9,500

£10,000

£10,500

£11,000

£100,000

£19,000

£20,000

£21,000

£22,000

£300,000

£57,000

£60,000

£63,000

£66,000

£500,000

£122,500

£125,000

£122,500

£125,000

£1,000,000

£286,250

£287,500

£271,250

£272,500

As we can see, smaller companies with profits not exceeding £300,000 suffer a steady tax increase, whereas a medium-sized company with profits of £500,000 fluctuates around the existing level of Corporation Tax, with little overall change and the larger company with profits of £1M gains from the proposed changes.

The situation for very small companies with annual profits under £50,000 is worst of all, as these companies have only just lost the nil rate Corporation Tax band, which was abolished on 1 st April 2006, and now face the further increases proposed over the next three years.

For example, a small company with an annual profit of £20,000 and which pays dividends of £10,000 each year, would have annual Corporation Tax bills over the period from 2003/2004 to 2009/2010 as follows:

 

Tax

 

£

2003/2004

£2,375

2004/2005

£3,088

2005/2006

£3,088

2006/2007

£3,800

2007/2008

£4,000

2008/2009

£4,200

2009/2010

£4,400

He’s no Robin Hood our Chancellor, it seems that he’s robbing the poor to feed the already rich!

Each of the above three tables are based on a single company with no associated companies.

Capital Allowances

A large number of reforms to the system of capital allowances claimed by businesses are proposed, as follows:

Property Taxation

Some useful improvements to the Landlord’s Energy Saving Allowance are to be introduced with effect from 6 th April 2007, as follows:

It is also proposed that the relief will be made available to landlord companies at some future date when our Government has finally got permission from Brussels!

The business premises renovation allowance, originally proposed in 2005, will finally come into effect from 11 th April 2007. This allowance will give immediate 100% relief for expenditure on the renovation or conversion of vacant property in disadvantaged areas which is then brought back into business use. The property must have been vacant for at least a year and certain types of business use are excluded from the relief.

Conversely, commercial property left vacant for 6 months will lose business rate relief. The permitted vacant period is reduced to just 3 months for offices and retail premises.

The owners of a company which exists solely to hold a private residence overseas will be exempt from any benefit in kind Income Tax charge in the UK on their personal use of the property. This measure is to be given retrospective effect meaning that the Revenue should now refrain from attempting to collect any tax in these circumstances. Certain conditions must be met to qualify for the exemption and it is worth remembering that foreign taxes may still arise in these circumstances.

For a five year period from 1 st October 2007, new homes costing no more than £500,000 and meeting the ‘zero carbon’ standard, will be exempt from Stamp Duty Land Tax. For more expensive houses, there will be a £15,000 reduction in the tax.

A new framework is being set out to govern the taxation of Authorised Investment Funds investing in property.

The VAT rate on qualifying housing alterations for elderly homeowners will be cut from 17.5% to 5%.

Cars and Fuel

VAT

Other Changes In Brief:

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