HMRC May Have Missed Time Limit On Tax Bills

September 7, 2010 by Davenports Tax Team  
Filed under Accountancy News, News

People hit with an unexpected tax demand may be able to refuse to pay up as HM Revenue & Customs could have exceeded its own time limits in which to ask for the money, experts said, the Scotsman reported on its web site.

Under tax rules HMRC must issue demands for underpaid tax within 12 months of the end of the tax year in which it became aware that people had underpaid, the newspaper added.

It emerged over the weekend that nearly six million people have paid the wrong amount of tax through the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) system.

Around 4.3 million of these have paid too much and are due a refund, but 1.4 million have underpaid and will have to handover an average of £1,428 each.

But if people provided HMRC with all the information they needed to get their tax code right, it should have used this information within 12 months of the end of the tax year in which it was received to claw back the extra money.

From Accountancy Age

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Advertiser Websites and Social Networking Activity to be Covered in the CAP Code from 1st March 2011.

September 6, 2010 by Davenports  
Filed under News, Web News

The digital remit of the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) is to be extended significantly to deliver more comprehensive consumer protection online. Importantly, for IAB members, methods of branded communication such as advertisers’ own websites and social networking pages will now be covered within the CAP Code.

The ASA’s present remit online includes ads in paid-for space and sales promotions wherever they appear. But from next year, the rules in the UK Code of Non-broadcast Advertising, Sales Promotion and Direct Marketing (the CAP Code) will apply in full to marketing communications online, including the rules relating to misleading advertising, social responsibility and the protection of children. The remit will apply to all sectors and all businesses and organisations regardless of size.

The Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP), the body responsible for writing the CAP Code, has decided to extend the digital remit of the ASA in response to a formal recommendation from a wide cross-section of UK industry, including the IAB. CAP has today published a document detailing the new remit and sanctions. In summary:

The new remit will ensure the same high standards as in other media and will cover:

  • Advertisers’ own marketing communications on their own websites and;
  • Marketing communications in other non-paid-for space under their control, such as social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter.

The remit is focussed on ‘selling’ messages in order to protect the right to freedom of speech online. For example, journalistic and editorial content and material related to causes and ideas - except those that are direct solicitations of donations for fund-raising - are excluded from the remit.

Nick Stringer, director of regulatory affairs for the IAB said: “Self-regulation must maintain pace with today’s fast-moving digital environment and changing consumer behaviour. The ASA’s extended digital media remit aims to protect internet users and enhance their trust, as well as industry and political confidence, in the medium.”

Implementation

The remit will come into force on 1 March 2011 after a six month period of grace to allow the ASA and CAP to conduct training work to raise awareness and educate business on the requirements of the CAP Code, particularly amongst those who may not previously have been subject to ASA regulation. Website owners and agencies are urged to sign up to CAP Services at www.cap.org.uk to receive guidance and training to help ensure their sites comply with the new rules before 1 March 2011.

CAP Chairman Andrew Brown said, “Extending the online remit of the ASA has been a top priority for UK industry over the last couple of years. Our aim has been to extend further in the online world the principles that are already well established in our system, namely those of effective consumer protection and fair competition.”

To help their members better understand the reasons behind and implications of the ASA’s new remit, the IAB has published a list of FAQs on its website (111k), and will be launching a programme of education – to include briefing documents and events – in the coming months.

Amy Kean, head of the IAB social media council, said: “The ASA’s new remit should be celebrated by the social media industry, as the move will only serve to reinforce the integrity of the discipline and reassure advertisers that the work of their agencies remains ethical and transparent. We intend to spend the next few months helping social media practitioners make sense of the changes with ongoing conversations about how the updated CAP Code will be implemented.”

Sanctions

In addition to the ASA’s present sanctions, which already achieve a high level of compliance, CAP member bodies have agreed new sanctions to apply to the extended remit such as:

  • Removal of paid-for search advertising – ads that link to the page hosting the non-compliant marketing communication may be removed with the agreement of the search engines.
  • ASA paid-for search advertisements - the ASA could place advertisements online highlighting an advertiser‟s continued non-compliance.

Funding

The industry has agreed to apply the standard 0.1% levy on paid-for advertisements appearing on internet search engines through media and search agencies. This is an extension of the existing funding mechanism in other media that pays for the ASA and it will be supplemented initially with seed capital from Google.

ASA Chairman Lord Chris Smith said, “This significant extension of the ASA’s remit has the protection of children and consumers at its heart. We have received over 4,500 complaints since 2008 about marketing communications on websites that we couldn’t deal with, but from 1 March anyone who has a concern about a marketing communication online will be able to turn to the ASA.”

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Today a new regional National Insurance Contributions (NICs) holiday for new businesses came into effect.

September 6, 2010 by Davenports Tax Team  
Filed under Accountancy News, News

New business set up outside London, the South East and East of England will be eligible for a holiday worth up to £5,000 for up to the first ten employees they hire in their first year of business. This means a maximum saving on their national insurance payments of up to £50,000.

The scheme will run for three years. It is estimated that 400,000 new businesses will benefit by having a lower tax bill from employing new staff.

New businesses established since the announcement in the Budget on the 22nd June, and which meet the qualifying criteria, will also be eligible to apply.

The regional NICs holiday, announced in the June Budget, will encourage the creation of private sector jobs in regions reliant on public sector employment by reducing the cost to new business of employing staff.

Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, David Gauke:

“We need to rebalance our economy which has become over reliant on public spending and jobs provided by the public sector.

“The NICs holiday for new businesses in addition to cuts in corporation tax will provide a valuable boost to start up businesses and help foster the private sector led recovery that will drive growth in the UK over the coming years”

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