Tax bodies urge cautious approach to change to corporation tax obligations
Tax professionals welcome the government’s publication today of a consultation on Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Corporation Tax – especially the confirmation that it is not compulsory for companies until at least 2026.
Tina Riches, chair of the Joint Association of Taxation Technicians (ATT) and Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT) Digitalisation and Agent Services Committee, said: “We are pleased to see that HMRC have indicated that Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Corporation Tax is not happening before 2026, and that HMRC are engaging with the profession, rather than rushing to implement first and examine later.
“We do not believe that the case has been adequately made that the benefits of MTD to taxpayers and HMRC justify the costs, particularly in relation to the proposed extension to corporation tax. We are disappointed that the consultation presupposes that most entities within the charge to corporation tax should be within the scope of MTD, before the costs and benefit arising to different parts of the population have been established.
“MTD for VAT is still in its infancy, and we know from a parliamentary question published this week that the government is drawing up revised estimates for the costs to businesses of MTD, despite it being made compulsory for most VAT registered firms back in April 2019, and commitments to extend the requirements to all VAT registered businesses from April 2022, and unincorporated businesses for income tax from April 2023.
“The concerns that surfaced in our survey also cast doubt on whether compulsion is the right approach to extending MTD, or if it will deliver the significant reduction in the tax gap sought. It would be premature to extend MTD further without reliable evidence to demonstrate it will achieve its purpose.”
This is particularly the case with MTD for Corporation Tax, where ATT and CIOT believe it is questionable whether there will be any positive difference for companies, especially larger ones. If a key purpose of MTD is to encourage taxpayers to become digital then it is not necessary to extend it to corporation tax, as a large proportion of companies are VAT registered and so already in MTD for VAT, or using digital records anyway.
Tina Riches said: “It is difficult to envisage how the complex nature of the accounting and corporation tax rules, especially when applied on a group or international basis, will interact with MTD. There is a real risk that implementing MTD for corporation tax could result in an expensive quarterly reporting exercise for companies, with no net benefits for any of the parties involved.”