WHAT IS FRAUD?
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WHAT IS FRAUD?
I thought that I knew! But I have just finished reading an HMRC
guidance note on mini umbrella company fraud, and now I am not so sure.
HMRC, under the heading “What mini umbrella company
fraud is”, tell me that “there is no standard mini umbrella company fraud model
and arrangements are constantly evolving as organised criminals try to hide
their fraudulent activities from HMRC”.
Perhaps if I knew what a mini umbrella company is, that might mean
something to me, but as it is I am none the wiser. They later tell me that, “The fraud is
primarily based around the abuse of 2 government incentives aimed at small
businesses – the VAT Flat-Rate Scheme and the Employment Allowance”.
The legislation that implements the VAT Flat-Rate
Scheme can be found in the VAT Regulations 1995. Reg 55B states that “the Commissioners may …
authorise a taxable person to account for and pay VAT in respect of his
relevant supplies …”. Reg 55C says that
relevant supplies are “any supply of goods or services …”. Reg 55L says “a taxable person shall be
eligible to be authorised to account for VAT in accordance with the scheme at
any time if (a) there are reasonable grounds for believing that – (i) the value
of taxable supplies to be made by him … will not exceed £150,000”. Regulation 55P allows HMRC to terminate a
person’s authorisation to use the scheme if they consider it necessary to do so
for the protection of the revenue.
Accordingly, to be legally entitled to use the
Flat-Rate Scheme, you need
a)
to have been
authorised to do so by HMRC,
b)
to make supplies
(such as hiring out staff or sub-contractors),
c)
for those
supplies not to exceed £150,000,
d)
for HMRC not to
have withdrawn approval.
These are simple conditions. A person who meets them is legally entitled
to use the scheme. Unless a person only pretends
to make supplies – which is not what seems to be worrying HMRC – it is not
readily apparent how someone can abuse the scheme and, by doing so, commit
fraud in relation to the scheme. What I
think HMRC do not like is a situation where a company satisfies all of the
requirements but ceases its business a little before its supplies reach
£150,000 and a new company then employs the same staff and itself registers for
the scheme. But it is not illegal to
cease one’s business, so again that of itself cannot be fraudulent.
The legislation for the Employment Allowance is in s1
of the National Insurance Contributions Act 2014. This says that “a person qualifies for an
employment allowance for a tax year if, in the tax year – (a) the person is the
secondary contributor in relation to payments of earnings to … one or more
employed earners, and (b) in consequence, the person incurs liabilities to pay
secondary Class 1 contributions”. As
both (a) and (b) are questions of fact, it is again hard to see how a person
who engages employees can abuse the scheme and fraudulently claim the
allowance.
A company does not qualify for an allowance if its
employer’s National Insurance contributions in the previous tax year exceeded
£100,000, or it has connected companies and the combined total contributions of
all of them exceeded £100,000. Again,
that is a question of fact which is known to HMRC, so the only way I can see to
commit fraud is to lie about which companies are associated. But, again, that does not seem to be what is
worrying HMRC.
Of course, to start a business of employing and hiring
out staff and shutting it down and starting again before qualifying thresholds
are breached is tax avoidance. But
everyone accepts that tax avoidance is not fraud. It cannot suddenly become fraud if HMRC do
not like it or even because it is carried out on a systematic basis, provided
that the brief lives of the successive businesses do not breach the relevant
thresholds.
HMRC also tell people who hire staff from mini umbrella
companies that, “As an end-user or provider of temporary labour it is your
responsibility to be clear about who pays the workers and how they are
paid”. Unless the umbrella company is
offshore (in which case the end-user can be held responsible for the tax and
National Insurance), I am not aware of any law that imposes such a
responsibility. Nor can I see any
rational reason why an end-user should care who pays its temporary workers, as
long as they continue to turn up for work.
HMRC tells workers to “find out about how and what
you’ll be paid”. That is obviously a
sensible thing to do, but probably pointless advice as I doubt that many people
are prepared to carry out work in complete ignorance of how and when they will
be paid.
HMRC go on to warn employers, “if you do not take
reasonable care, a fraudulent supply chain can lead to reputational and
financial damage to your business and your workers may not receive all they are
entitled to”. Mini umbrella company
fraud also significantly reduces tax payments to HMRC including PAYE, National
Insurance and VAT. Whilst I have no
issue with that, most of it would also apply to the same extent if there had
been no fraud but straightforward tax avoidance. HMRC are conflating the use of mini umbrella
companies which avoid National Insurance and VAT and fraudulent companies that
are set up to engage staff and then disappear before handing over PAYE and NIC to
HMRC.
My concern is that HMRC seem to have decided that the
dividing line between tax avoidance and tax evasion, which they have always
respected in the past, is no longer appropriate and any action that they do not
like, however legal it may be, is now considered to be fraudulent and thus
criminal conduct.
ROBERT MAAS