The Philip Hardman Memorial Lecture given to the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England & Wales by the Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury, David Gauke MP, in the City of London
Speech by the Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury.
Introduction
I would like to start by thanking the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales for this invitation.Ģż It really is a great honour to be here tonight, and to be the guest speaker at the Philip Hardman memorial lecture.
As the Minister with strategic oversight of tax policy, I now deal with issues relating to tax on a day-to-day basis.Ģż But, in preparing for todayās lecture, I realised that my first experience of tax policy was, as a schoolboy,Ģż listening to Philip Hardmanās analyses of the Budgets of the 1980s.
Now I donāt want to give a false impression that, as a teenager, I had a precocious interest in tax matters, or that I rushed home from school for the sole purpose of watching a discussion about the tax changes contained in a Budget.Ģż I like to think I was pretty normal for my age.Ģż And that my interests were fairly typical for a teenage boy - cricket, football, girls and, of course, macroeconomics.
But even I, watching Philip Hardman talk about tax, realised that this was something people could discuss with knowledge, flair, enthusiasm, wit and passion.Ģż Of course, that doesnāt always happen, as I learnt some years later in my next real experience of discussions on tax policyā¦
ā¦serving on the public bill committee of the Finance Bill.
Nonetheless, my purpose today is to communicate clearly about some of the more complex areas of tax. To set out some of the difficult judgements weāve been grappling with as a Ministerial team, as we seek to make Britainās tax system an asset to our economy once again, as I know everyone here would wish it to be.
Iām going to start with the context - the challenges weāre facing and the complex balances we need to strike.
The first set of these are financial, as we deal with Britainās debts.
I can tell you it is humbling to enter the Treasury as a Minister for the first time, and face a situation where the country is borrowing a pound for every four it spends.
The excitement of that first red box, was tempered by the amount of red ink in the first briefing. And the experience inevitably stays with us as we contemplate the tax reform this country needsā¦
ā¦as we consider how we reform our tax system to assist long term, sustainable economic growth.
The second challenge is public acceptability. As we face up to the difficult choices that the country needs us to take, we need to carry the British people with us.
That means leading public opinion at times, but not wilfully testing the publicās patience when itās understandably short.Ģż
You have to pick your battles carefully when people are frustrated and angry with personal consequences that are not of their own making.
As an MP you get a clear sense of this in every surgery and constituency mailbag.Ģż Thereās never a shortage of suggestions for worthy areas of additional public expenditure.Ģż And as a Treasury Minister with responsibility for taxā¦.well, letās just say that people are that bit keener that you factor in their viewsā¦
ā¦I never knew there were so many colourful alternatives to signing off a letter āyours sincerelyā.
And by and large, the focus of the general public is not on the broad, intellectual coherence of the tax system but, understandably, on the practical matter of how much they - as an individual or a company - pay.Ģż
Although, to be fair, I also receive a quite few representations saying why other people should pay more.
Third is the challenge of time.Ģż In our 24/7 news culture, politicians have to deliver progress, and usually the deadline is yesterday.Ģż
Thereās a constant pressure for immediate announcements and rapid impact. And as a new Government you feel this pressure even more keenly - especially when the public is very much engaged in the aftermath of an electionā¦
ā¦while theyāre still making their minds up about you, before you become the ānew normalā.
Yet in tax policy, short-term impact is often in tension with fundamental long-term reform. Todayās commitments will be tomorrowās constraints.
Thatās why weāve set ourselves against the patchwork quilt, knitted by constant change in the tax system. But at times this doesnāt sit easily with proclaiming on a daily basis that āsomething must be doneā.ĢżĢżĢż
Fourth, there is the balance to be struck between genuine and open consultation and the desire for certainty. We believe firmly in the benefits of consultation, especially in tax. There are established norms about the length of time we should consult for, and it seems only polite to adhere to them.
But we also hear business demands for certainty in our tax system.
So I find myself weighing up how best to consult on tax reform without creating undue uncertainty.Ģż Above all, how can I avoid an overall sense that too much of our tax system is in flux at any one time, even as we contemplate the big reforms that businesses say they want to see.
I can tell you, it turns out thereās no magic set of scales at the Treasury to help you discover if youāre getting the balance right.
Ģż
So thatās the prism of:
- The deficit;
- Public opinion;
- Balancing short term pressures against long term aims;
- And wanting to be open without creating uncertaintyā¦
ā¦through which I find myself looking at tax issues.
Iām not claiming that the vantage point is new, or the terrain insurmountable. Illustrious tax reformers of the past have marched these paths before.
Iām personally very attracted to the approach set out in Nigel Lawsonās 1988 Budget, where he set out his desire to:
- Reduce tax rates where theyāre too high;
- Abolish unwarranted breaks and exemptions;
- Make life simpler for the tax payer;
- And remove any injustices from the system.
Yet, the Government of the time also had to operate within some of the constraints I outlined earlier.Ģż This clear philosophy - and some of the policies best remembered from that era - did not emerge until the tenth budget of Mrs Thatcherās Government.
I promise you that is not the timeframe we are working on. But I hope that this will provide you with some context for the rest of my remarks tonight, and the questions you will pose to me in the Q and A, and in subsequent meetings.
But to get the ball rolling, Iād like to try to answer five key questions that many of you have been asking about our tax system.
Ģż
First, what will be our approach to Corporation Tax?
Second, how are we going to deliver on our promise to create a simpler tax system?
Third, where is the Government going with its statements on cracking down on evasion and reducing tax avoidance?
Fourth, what are we going to do to improve the quality of tax law as we make changes in these areas?
And fifth, what does the Spending Review mean for HMRC?
These may seem like disparate questions, but theyāre united by our ambition to create a competitive, simpler, fairer and more stable tax system.Ģż So Iāll answer each in turn, even if it sacrifices a bit of rhetorical elegance.
Corporation Tax
So let me turn first to Corporation Tax.Ģż
We are a pro-business, pro-growth Government.
We recognise that the world is becoming an ever more global marketplace, and itās therefore essential for us to look at new ways to attract business from abroad.Ģż
And in Britain, the tax system has an important role to play.
If we look back to 1997, the UK had the tenth lowest main rate of Corporation Tax among the current EU27 countries.Ģż
By the time we came to office, weād slipped to 20th.
Other countries had cut their rates further and faster than we had, and today it would be complacent not to follow suit.Ģż
That is why weāre cutting Corporation Tax to 27 per cent in the next year, with a one per cent reduction in each of the following three yearsā¦
ā¦taking us down to 24 per cent.
This will be the lowest rate of any major Western economy, one of the most competitive rates in the G20, and the lowest rate this country has ever seen.
And weāve done this in the context of many, many difficult decisions elsewhereā¦
ā¦when others would have been tempted to balance the books on the back of British business.
But if weāre going to be serious about encouraging strong growth in the years ahead, we need to pull up the shutters and send out a clear message that Britain is open for business.
That is an important first step.
But of course, weāre not so naive as to think that the competitiveness of our tax system is about reducing rates in isolation.
Itās also about how we tax, the rules that are in place, and what this means for different types of enterprise.
For years businesses have complained about the tax treatment of overseas subsidiaries.
Saying that our rules on foreign profits are archaic - dating back to the early 1980s - and bear little or no resemblance to the modern business environment.
So weāve launched two separate consultations to be completed by next yearās Finance Bill - one on interim improvements to the Controlled Foreign Company Rules and the other on the tax treatment of foreign branches.
This is ahead of the full reform of the CFC regime, which will be completed in Finance Bill 2012.
Itās our intention to adopt a more territorial approach to taxation, one that properly reflects the times we live in and how businesses now operate.
We know how important these reforms are to business and I know youāre all waiting for details.
But this is one area where we ask for your patience, so we can come forward with thoroughly worked up proposals that donāt create uncertainty. I know itās been 20 years since the last set of substantive reforms, so Iām hoping you wonāt begrudge me a few more days.
Itās my aim to publish further details on these reforms by the end of the month, to give you a sense of the direction weāre headingā¦
ā¦to show how we will create the most competitive Corporation Tax system in the G20.
Simplification
Now, moving to simplification.
Itās our view that we need to do something about the spaghetti bowl of reliefs and exemptions that is our tax system. Itās become an incredibly complicated dish, that is pretty much indigestible for the majority of people.
Yes, rewriting the recipe book on tax is no easy task, and, at the same time, itās unlikely to capture many headlines.Ģż
But this is important, fundamental even, to improving the way our tax system works.
This was the motivation behind the Office of Tax Simplificationā¦
ā¦drawing together individuals from across the business, tax and legal professions.Ģż Who in turn will provide the much needed institutional ballast, and expert advice.
The OTS is taking forward two reviews: one on simplifying small business taxation and the other focussing on tax reliefs.Ģż And theyāve already published a comprehensive list of all the reliefs and exemptions that exist within our tax system.Ģż
It is striking that when they began this process in the summer, the general view was that our tax system contained around 400 reliefs.Ģż
Their assessment shows that we actually have more than a thousand.Ģż
Now many of these serve a useful role in our tax system, but itās not unreasonable to ask if at least some of these reliefs are truly justified.Ģż For example, Iām all for taking a long term view of the tax system, but do we really need a āmillennium gift tax reliefā when the next oneās not for another 990 years?ĢżĢżĢż
And while the OTS is playing a valuable role in improving the stock of UK tax lawā¦
ā¦we recognise weāve also got to watch the flow of new measures.
We have to be careful with proposals that deliberately use the tax system to distort choices or try to manage business investment decisionsā¦
ā¦to avoid a situation where tax policy becomes a bidding war, as various sectors seek preferential treatment at the expense of wider business interests.
As a general rule, itās our preference to have fewer reliefs, but lower headline rates, in order to create a simpler, flatter system of taxation.
And as we moderate tax breaks, we will reduce the opportunity for tax avoidance - an issue that this Government takes very seriously.
Evasion and avoidance
Let me say upfront that I understand people in this audience get frustrated when they hear politicians apparently conflate tax planning, tax avoidance, and tax evasion.
I, and my colleagues in the Treasury, certainly know the difference, and can make these distinctions.
We recognise that the law legitimately gives scope for tax planning.
But we will also give no quarter to those who squarely break the rules and evade their responsibilities as taxpayers.
Over the next four years weāll be investing Ā£900 million in HMRC, much of it to tackle criminal behaviour and evasion.
At the same time, we also want to improve HMRCās operational capacity to identify and discourage tax avoidance.
Ģż
I know thereās times when Parliamentās intentions can be ambiguous, and that it is not always possible to divine the spirit of the law.Ģż And yes, better tax policy making will help us here.
But thereās also times when itās perfectly clear what the law intends - where reliefs and exemptions are then used in a highly artificial way.Ģż In these instances, people use their resources - and their talents - to twist the law and create results that everyone knows are simply too good to be true.Ģż
The fact is - in these testing times - the public wonāt wear it. They just donāt see it as fair.
And if weāre to carry them with us as we make other difficult choices, neither can we.
Of course, in tackling avoidance, we must do so in a way that doesnāt undermine certainty for business. Thatās part of the reason why weāre extending HMRCās large business service to more firms.
Similarly, itās only right that during difficult times steps are taken to ensure that banks make a full and fair contribution.
We canāt pretend that the financial crisis never happened, or ignore the possibility of it happening again.Ģż But equally, we donāt want to drive our financial institutions abroad.
The Bank Levy gets this balance right - by charging a premium that reflects the risks the sector as a whole poses to the wider economy.
And achieving the right balance is a requirement that a responsible government must meet - even if others have the luxury of ignoring such matters and can play to the gallery.
But in broad terms, our actions will give greater clarification of whatās acceptable; but also ensure that our tax system is fair, simpler and more efficient.
Tax lawĢż
Which brings me to tax law - or more specifically, how tax policy is made.
We need a more competitive tax system, a simpler tax system, fewer exemptions, fewer reliefs. And this means change.
But a little paradoxically, businesses also tell me they want a more stable tax system.
As a Government, weāve taken this as a call to create a more transparent framework within which tax policy is developedā¦
ā¦a framework that will improve the quality of tax law and the way tax policy is made.
So itās our intention to introduce a system that puts predictability and stability first; a framework for making tax policy that is:
- Not haphazard, but predictable - based upon a clear strategy that produces greater certainty about the future;
- Not disorderly, but stable - focusing on fewer, better developed proposals; getting legislation right the first time round through proper consultation and allowing time for better scrutiny;
- Not opaque, but transparent - explaining our rationale, sharing our analysis and our assumptions;
Building this will take some time, but weāve already made good progress.
We published in July a draft of the Finance Bill, which was later debated in Parliament this autumn.Ģż And on the 9th December weāll publish most of the contents of the 2011 Finance Bill.Ģż
This is all part of a more deliberate approach to making tax law.Ģż And at every stage of the process we want to involve tax professionals in the decision-making.
Life as a Government Minister in the Treasury is very different from my time as a Member of the Opposition.
Having a small army of civil servants at your beck and call is a far cry from the days in Opposition - where it was often an operation consisting of three men and a dog.
The temptation now is to conduct less external engagement - to rely on the experience that resides within Whitehall.
This, however, is not my approach.
I understand the value thatās to be had from collecting the thoughts of those who are directly employed in the tax profession.
Who, through their own experience, recognise the frailties of our current tax system, and have ideas for reforming the processes that guide Government decision-making.
I remember the first Finance Bill in which I sat, back in 2006, where the previous administration was making changes to the tax treatment of trusts for IHT purposes.
This wasnāt the most glamorous of issues, but what struck me was how much of the information relevant to making these changes came from outside HMT and HMRC.
It showed me that those in Government, and the Civil Service, donāt have a monopoly on tax knowledgeā¦
ā¦that Whitehall doesnāt have all the answers.
So, as a Government, weāre putting engagement with external experts at the heart of our strategy for reform.
This was part of the approach we set out in our discussion document - Tax Policy Making: a New Approach - published alongside the June Budget.
Following the publication of the document, weāve undertaken an extensive programme of engagement on the way we make tax policy.
Weāve met with over 40 representative bodies and tax practitioners - including lawyers, accountants, and tax managers.
And between now and the end of the year, weāll be looking at all the advice weāve received, and considering how it can help inform our approach to making tax policy in the future.
This is not a one-off exercise.
Last month was the first meeting of the Forum of Tax Professionals - a group of Tax Professionals who Iāll be meeting twice a year to provide external input.
And we will continue to seek feedback on the way we make tax policy, to give businesses greater certainty.
HMRC
Which brings me to the last of my questionsā¦
ā¦what does the Spending Review mean for HMRC?
Iām sure youāve all seen the headline figures - 25% savings, 15% after reinvestment - but this only tells part of the story.
Even before we came to power, it was always clear that departments would have to reduce their budgetsā¦
ā¦and that HMRC could not be immune from these pressures.
As part of the normal discussions that go on before any general election - I met with senior HMRC staff to discuss where they thought the departmentās priorities should lie.
I asked them to come up with a set of proposals for possible savings; to look at where efficiencies could be made; and identify the areas that generate the most error and unnecessary work.
The emphasis was never on making cuts at any price.
As Iāve said throughout, we want to create a better, more competitive tax system.
And the way we administer tax policy; the services HMRC provides; and our relationship with business are all a part of thisā¦
ā¦and thatās what I asked HMRC to focus on.
So weāre investing in improvements to PAYE.
Thereās no hiding from the fact that we need to modernise the system.Ģż It has to be more stable and more accurate - with greater use of real time information.
This will undoubtedly improve complianceā¦
ā¦which is also why weāre extending HMRCās Large Business Service.
We know that building better relationships with business is the most effective way to improve tax compliance - it helps bring swift resolutions to enquiries; enables both parties to identify tax risks; and reduces the potential for error.
Not only this, but it costs very little, while the benefits can be substantial.
And lastly, weāve recognised the dual role that HMRC has in paying down the deficit.Ģż Not just through savings, but also through increasing revenues.
HMRC is unique in that, of all departments, itās the only one that actually makes money, as opposed to just spending it.
And when faced with the circumstances weāre in today, this has never been more important, and something Iāve long recognised.Ģż
So I was pleased when my Ministerial colleagues agreed to reinvest Ā£900 million of savings to tackle evasion, fraud and other criminal activity and tax avoidance.ĢżĢż
I see this as a vote of confidence in HMRC.Ģż
I know some of you may be slightly sceptical that we can deliver on this settlement, while simultaneously improving the services we provide.
Yes, this will be hard - but I assure you, our plan is deliverable.
I accept that in many ways HMRC faces more of a challenge than other departments - having to deliver on reinvestment, as well as making savings.
But I hope you agree that itās the right challenge for HMRC to take forward.Ģż One that balances its core objectives of maximising revenues, greater efficiency, and delivering a good service.
Conclusion
So to conclude.
Iād like to reiterate that these are difficult times for our country, and it is humbling to be part of the Government team trying to grapple with the challenges this poses.
Weāve already had to make tough choices - but these have been the right decisions for the longer term.
In tax, weāve faced a number of significant constraints, and found ourselves balancing the needs of the public with the needs of business and, of course, the need to tackle the deficit.
I hope that today Iāve given you a useful insight into how weāve looked to juggle these sometimes conflicting interests.
Ģż
And that you see how, over time, we want to make very substantial progress.Ģż In fact, weāre determined to do so.
I feel weāve already achieved a great deal in our first few months;Ģż
- Setting out how weāre going to reduce Corporation Tax;
- Establishing the Office of Tax Simplification;
- Publishing our plans on improving the making of tax law;
- And publishing our first Finance Bill in draft, months in advance of it being debated in Parliament.
But weāre under no illusionsā¦
ā¦we still have some way to go.
Only recently, Richard Lambert, Chief Executive of the CBI, described our tax system as a āball and chain round the ankle of the UK economyā
We need to break these shackles.
Our tax system was once viewed as an asset.Ģż And it needs to be an asset again.
As a Government, we want to invest in it, and maintain it over time.
And as we do so, with your help over the months and years ahead, I hope that youāll bang the drum for Britain with your clients.
That youāll tell them that this Government āgets itā - that we know what weāre doing, and have the interests of business at heart.
And that the UK is headed for a fairer, more competitive, simpler, and more stable tax system in the future.
Thank you.