Showing posts with label duty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label duty. Show all posts

Monday, 5 November 2012

Cash, crime and the dodging of taxes

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We've become pretty judging of others - and especially businesses - for what we see as the dodging of taxes. Yet, a few saints and cabinet ministers aside, we all contribute to the informal economy - paying for stuff in cash knowing that half goes in the tradesman's back pocket being the obvious (but not exclusive) example.

Community Links have been doing a sterling job trying to unpick the informal economy, to build our understanding and to direct our attention to creating a pathway to what they term "formality":

It is important to note that the rationale for working informally and barriers to formalisation vary, therefore different policy measures are required for different types of informal entrepreneur. The report sets out some suggestions for policy responses which are suitable for differing types of informal entrepreneur, yet it is recognised that there is no ‘quick fix’ solution and there is a need to involve a wider range of stakeholders in attempting to develop bespoke policy solutions.

The premise for this argument is, of course, that the formalising of informal businesses is ipso facto a desirable thing. And the only reason for that desire is, of course, that informal business is untaxed. Indeed, Community Links rejects a laissez faire approach that says "so what":

From the evaluation of policy approaches provided in the literature review, it is obvious that neither a ‘laissez-faire’ approach nor a ‘de-regulationist’ approach should be pursued due to the negative overall impacts on the economic landscape. 

However the key argument presented against a deregulatory approach appears to be an very odd one:

In sum, even if de-regulation was to reduce the magnitude of informality, the impact would be to widen inequalities and reduce working conditions compared with more regulated states.

You will, of course have noted the contradiction in this statement. If someone is better off in a formal, regulated state then that is what he will choose, surely? Why operate outside that status if there is no advantage? Once again we are seeing the innate prejudice against free markets that is built into so many studies of these sort. Commissioned by governments and those who serve the cause of governments, there can be no place for independence of spirit. Rather we must create means by which formalisation can take place - without removing the obvious financial advantage of 'the black': you don't pay taxes.

Equally weirdly, the conclusion of the authors in this case argues for formalisation because people are "social actors":

In this report, we define ‘formalisation’ simply as the process by which informal work becomes compliant with employment, tax and benefit laws This views individuals not as ‘rational economic actors’ but as ‘social actors’ who are ordinarily inclined to comply with the law, partly because of their belief in the rule of law, and partly as a matter of long-term self-interest (Murphy, 2005).

While I don't wish to wander off down one of the by-ways of sociology by discussing rational behaviour and the utter nonsense of arguments claiming some different (and presumably irrational) social behaviour, it does seem to me that most actors in an informal market see little point or purpose in the "long-term". Like that famous economist they know - better than most - that in the long-term they are dead.

At the heart of informality is arbitrage - exploiting the gap existing between the formal economy and the black. An obvious example can be seen in the smuggling of booze and fags (or indeed cheese). Since government chooses to regulate the price of these desirable products - and indeed to constrain who I can sell them too - there is a wonderful arbitrage opportunity. And the bigger the regulatory gap, the bigger the opportunity and the greater the profit. It is no surprise that of the top twenty "tax dodgers", half are cigarette smugglers.

When we get to the prescription from the Community Links authors, we get a delightful - almost sweet - naivety and sense that they don't have the first clue how the bounds between crime and 'informality' are blurred. They propose measures like:

...offering amnesties on either a societal or individual level to informal entrepreneurs who put their affairs in order; offering business advisory and support services to those formalising their business ventures; and providing a range of targeted direct or indirect tax incentives encouraging customers to use formal rather than informal enterprises

Since we are speaking of a cash economy here - with no duty, no taxes and no questions asked - what makes anyone think that "amnesties" are any use? Think of the jobbing builder - the local handyman, if you will. He's playing the game of 'one pound for the books, one for my pocket'. The only risk is that the revenue will investigate and end up doing what? Giving him a tax bill that he'll pay off across two years by agreement.

For the proper criminal - the one gaming the gap between duty in Turkey and duty in the UK - no amnesty on earth will work since it implies taking his business away. More to the point, this smuggler knows the down side risk is a jail sentence. But right now he's making a packet and even with the 'Proceeds of Crime Act' the cops will never track all that money. Assuming, of course, they catch him (what's the extradition treaty like with Turkey?).

Finally our Community Links writers fall into the fault of moralising - as if this with attract anything more than a snort and a snigger as the man on 'the black' carries on:

Such measures include tax education and awareness campaigns about the benefits of declared work, and the pursuit of perceived tax fairness, procedural justice and redistributive justice.

Given who we are dealing with, this appeal to some collectivist morality seems beyond parody. Our criminal tax dodger simply isn't going to play. Why on earth should he? He'll listen to your lecture, smile, pour himself a large one and toast the naivety of the government.

In the end, setting up a new quango (as our authors suggest) may be good business for them and great business for Community Links but it fails entirely as a strategy - assuming that we actually need such a strategy. We've known for years that there's a pretty big gap between reported income and reported expenditure - especially at the lower end of the socio-economic scale - that can't be wholly explained away by levels of borrowing. Indeed the very fact of the informal - often criminal - economy says that this gap must exist. Just take estimates of the illegal drugs market:

An online report published by the Home Office in 2006 has estimated the UK drugs market to be worth £4.645bn in 2003/4[8], with a margin of error of +/- £1.154bn. 

Do our authors really think that this market - or the growing market for smugged fags and illegal vodka - is going to go away because of "tax education" or some sort of "tax incentive" to customers?

In the end those working in the cash economy - whether they're declaring some income or pretending to be out-of-work - aren't going to regularise their circumstances unless you either make it worth their while doing so (which means lower taxes and duties) or remove the opportunity for arbitrage (which means lower taxes and duties).

Always and everywhere, the black economy is a consequence or crime or high taxes - or both. Pretending otherwise or that we can change the ways of these people by lecturing them about fairness and redistribution is ridiculous.

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Thursday, 18 October 2012

Why tobacco duty is now counter-productive...

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I am grateful to Mr Worstall for digging out the stat from the bowels of HMRC reporting:

Key findings for hand rolling tobacco (HRT)
• The illicit market share for HRT was estimated to be 38 per cent in 2010-11, with associated revenue losses of £660 million.

So there you have it folks. For roll-ups (where brand is far less significant than for cigarettes) four out of ten of them are made with "non-UK duty paid" tobacco. And most of that is smuggled.

Instead of thinking about the loss of revenue, let's think instead of the children who are taking up smoking because the man in the van doesn't care who he sells to.

The policy has to change. The strategy of bashing us over the head with taxes, health warnings and restrictions isn't working. As we heard (and I reported) recently, in West Yorkshire:

30 per cent of 11 to 15-year-olds had tried smoking at least once...

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Friday, 16 March 2012

More hypocrisy about saving the pub...

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There's an Early Day Motion:

That this House notes that beer and pubs contribute 21 billion to UK GDP and support almost one million jobs, almost half of them for 16 to 24 year olds; acknowledges that brewing is one of British manufacturing's success stories; believes that 2012, as a year of national celebrations, is the perfect time to recognise the economic and social value of great British beer and the pub industry; and so urges the Government to listen to consumer and industry groups, including the British Beer and Pub Association, the Society of Independent Brewers and the Campaign for Real Ale, who have united to call on the Chancellor of the Exchequer to support Britain's beer and pub sector by suspending the beer duty escalator to help reduce pub closures, create 5,000 additional jobs and ensure pub going remains an affordable leisure activity.

Let's be clear, I support this idea - indeed, duty on alcohol should be dropped across the board. But am I alone in being irritated by MPs moaning about the decline in pubs when, by their very actions, they contributed to that decline?

Of the 97 MPs who have signed this EDM, 47 voted to ban smoking in pubs. I make that 47 people who should hang their heads in shame at the death of the pub.

Here's a list of those MPs:
 
Peter Bottomley (Con), James Clappison (Con), David Anderson (Lab), Adrian Bailey (Lab), Kevin Barron (Lab), Clive Betts (Lab), Tom Brake (LD), Annette Brooke (LD), Lorely Burt (LD), Menzies Campbell (LD), Martin Caton (Lab), Tom Clarke (Lab), Rosie Cooper (Lab), Jim Dobbin (Lab), Frank Doran (Lab), Jim Dowd (Lab), Louise Ellman (Lab), Paul Flynn (Lab), Don Foster (LD), Mike Gapes (Lab), Andrew George (LD), Mike Hancock (LD), Stephen Hepburn (Lab), David Heyes (Lab), Jimmy Hood (Lab), Martin Horwood (LD), George Howarth (Lab), Gerald Kaufman (Lab), John Leech (LD), Tony Lloyd (Lab), Steve McCabe (Lab), John McDonnell (Lab), Alan Meale (Lab), Austin Mitchell (Lab), John Pugh (LD), Linda Riordan (Lab), John Robertson (Lab), Dan Rogerson (LD), Bob Russell (LD), Dennis Skinner (Lab), Gerry Sutcliffe (Lab), Mark Tami (Lab), Joan Walley (Lab), Robert Walter (Con), Hywel Williams (PC), Mark Williams (LD), Mike Wood (Lab)

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Tuesday, 6 March 2012

Stop the Beer Duty Escalator!

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The nice brewing folk at Hobgoblin have an e-petition:

Every year, the beer tax escalator increases the tax on beer by 2% above the rate of inflation, thus adding considerably more pressure on the British pub, the cornerstone of many of our communities. Removing the beer duty escalator at the next budget will help keep beer more affordable and go a long way to supporting the institution that is – the great British pub.

Going to the pub is a core British tradition and so is enjoying great beer. If you want to continue enjoying your fresh pint in your local pub then it’s crucial that you support our campaign to grind the beer duty tax escalator to a halt. 

Go and sign it - HERE

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Thursday, 1 March 2012

Prohibition doesn't work does it? More evidence from Bradford...

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The sale of 'illegal' cigarettes and tobacco is growing - according to this article it 'costs' the HMRC "£10 million a day". We all know it's growing and we all know the reasons - high rates of duty and the ease of smuggling. Here's one example from a court case in Bradford:

Steven Brocklehurst, for Mahmad, said his client took over the shop in May last year, at which time it became apparent there were people who, on going abroad – particularly to Poland – would buy tobacco as part of their duty free allowance and sell it on to the shop owner.

“Clearly it was a process that had been going on for some time with the previous owner,” Mr Brocklehurst said. 

So these nice Eastern European folk were funding their trips home by gaming the margins between UK prices and Polish prices - a margin made up almost entirely of tax. And the problem is growing - here's the chap from West Yorkshire Trading Standards:


“The fact that so many cheap, illicit cigarettes are on sale is seriously undermining Government efforts to encourage people to quit smoking. In addition those who deal in illicit tobacco are evading tax which has an obvious damaging effect on legitimate business and the wider economy.” 

And look at the downside risks - 60 hours community work and a fine of less than two grand.

Denormalisation - prohibition by another name - simply doesn't work, does it!

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Tuesday, 27 September 2011

Learning from Jehovah's Witnesses...

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Sunday last I chanced across some Jehovah’s Witnesses as they plied their proselytising ways in Harecroft, a little hamlet between Cullingworth and Wilsden. I didn’t stop to chat but the occasion popped into my mind when I read David Green’s latest piece on scientology.

And the thought wasn’t the usual, ‘good grief, what are these people on’ but a question. Simply put, is there anything we can learn from Jehovah’s Witnesses – or for that matter Mormons and Scientologists?

After all, these groups are the successful end of barking pseudo-christianity – there are over seven million JWs, around 13 million Mormons and Scientology claims several million (although the true figure is perhaps below 500,000).

Set against a world population of several billions these aren’t big numbers but that isn’t the point – these are organisations with extremely heterodox beliefs (I am being kind here) and that require adherents to make significant life changes to belong. You can’t simply toddle along with the same old sinful practices, you will have to tithe, you will have to separate yourself from the corrupt world and you will have to accept the disciplines of the church.

So what can we learn?

Around a dozen men and women were out on a September morning knocking on the doors of people in Harecroft. Knowing full well that the response would be varied – from a door slammed rudely in the face to polite engagement. Every now and then someone will get a bite – rather than the slammed door, real interest and a discussion about what Jehovah offers.

Every week these people go out seeking to spread their message. Not in a cynical, worldly-wise manner but from sheer conviction and duty. We can, in our snide, knowing way, mock what these people believe but we should learn from their commitment and sense of conviction. We do not do this, we have ‘better-things-to-do’, places to go, grand jobs to undertake and much else of importance and moment.

Gordon Dickson wrote Necromancer as a prequel to his Childe Cycle (the most famous part of which is the Dorsai Trilogy) in which he set the context for man’s splintering as he expands through space – and the search for ‘responsible man’, a drawing together of three core traits: faith, courage and intellectual curiosity. Groups such as the Jehovah’s Witness are echoed in the “Friendlies” – planets populated by true believers.

The lesson we can draw from faith isn’t that it can ever take the place of enquiry – the problem with fanaticism is that is brooks no questioning, no doubt – but that we need faith to provide the motivation to go to Harecroft on a cold morning and knock on doors. Not just one morning but morning after morning – without the self-imposed discipline of duty, without true belief you will not do this, you will stay in bed and read or lounge on the sofa and watch the telly.

Without faith – however transient – we will not act to persuade others of what we believe. If there is only doubt, mere scepticism, then there can be no truth and no justice. This is the lesson I take from those dozen men and women in Harecroft that morning – a lesson to believe and to make sure others are told of that belief.

A reminder that knocking doors, making phone calls, writing letters – engaging with the world – cannot be substituted with slick PR, with shiny ads and with banks of computers. A prompt that two minutes of face-to-face conversation communicates more than the cleverest of advertisements or the most well-crafted of press releases.

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Tuesday, 31 May 2011

Cut the tax on flying George

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I received an e-mail from Leeds Bradford Airport today regarding the consultation on proposed increases in Air Passenger Duty (APD):

LBA is warning that passengers still face the prospect of ‘double taxation’ and further increases in flying taxes when aviation enters the EU Emissions Trading Scheme in 2012; and also that the Chancellor may raise APD next year.

APD in the UK is already up to 8.5 times more than the European average. Many European countries have either already abandoned their aviation taxes, or indicated that they will do so, due to the negative effects on their economies, including: Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Holland, Ireland and Malta.

Even with the freeze, the UK economy is already losing £750m in GDP and 18,000 jobs as a direct result of the recent November 2010 rises in APD, not to mention the thousands of UK tourism jobs lost because less people can afford to holiday here. 

You can submit your comments and join me in urging George to cut the tax on flying - send your response to apd@hmtreasury.gsi.gov.uk by Friday 17 June 2011.

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Monday, 3 January 2011

On the death of the pub...

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Missed this brilliant obituary for the English pub in The Economist:

The 2007 smoking ban drove regulars onto chilly backless benches in hastily improvised beer gardens, or into the street, or simply home (1,409 pubs closed in 2007; 1,973, post-ban, in 2008). Around 24,000 pubs, roughly 40% of the total, are tied to giant “pubcos”, hooked to one particular brewer, and must buy their beer from them at premium prices. Pubs, selling pints for £3.50 ($4.50) must compete with sixpacks of beer in the supermarket, or cheap plonk at £3.50 a bottle; they must also pay a swingeing government duty on beer, now ten times as high as Germany’s.

There's more - read and mourn. Or better still start the resurrection - get out and visit your local, have a pint and a chat. And tell the new puritans to lay off with their nonsense about drinking, smoking and other fine pleasures.

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Sunday, 21 March 2010

Prohibitionist, puritan, anti-business...that's the UK Government for you


Our Government - egged on by leading prohibitionists like Sir Ian Gilmore and its own bigoted grass roots - has targeted the wine business for extra taxes. This is presumably because us middle class wine drinkers are an easier mark and of course we are ruining our children's futures by drinking wine in front of them.
So now the international wine producers are pulling out leading to lost jobs, closing businesses and missed opportunities. No surprise there then!
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