Tag Archive for Budget 2021

Super-deduction tax break – what is it and how does it work?

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
What is the super-deduction tax?
The super-deduction £25bn tax break, announced in last Wednesday’s Budget, is intended to spur investment by providing 25p off company tax bills for every pound of qualifying spending on plant and machinery.
How the super-deduction works
The super-deduction offers 130 per cent first-year relief on qualifying main rate plant and machinery investments from April 1 2021 until March 31 2023 for companies.
For most business equipment, there will be a super-deduction of 130 per cent of the expenditure incurred. This will mean that on a spend of £100,000, the corporation tax deduction will be £130,000, giving corporation tax relief at 19 per cent on £130,000, which is £24,700.
Normally such expenditure would either fall within a company’s annual investment allowance and produce relief of only £19,000 or alternatively be tax-relieved at 18 per cent of the cost per annum.
Nigel May, partner at MHA MacIntyre Hudson, said: “Companies looking to use this relief will need to take care when the assets that the expenditure relates to are sold: tax charges may then arise clawing back the relief. It is perhaps worth noting that certain expenditure is excluded, in particular the acquisition of company cars.”
What

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Super-deduction tax break – what is it and how does it work?

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
What is the super-deduction tax?
The super-deduction £25bn tax break, announced in last Wednesday’s Budget, is intended to spur investment by providing 25p off company tax bills for every pound of qualifying spending on plant and machinery.
How the super-deduction works
The super-deduction offers 130 per cent first-year relief on qualifying main rate plant and machinery investments from April 1 2021 until March 31 2023 for companies.
For most business equipment, there will be a super-deduction of 130 per cent of the expenditure incurred. This will mean that on a spend of £100,000, the corporation tax deduction will be £130,000, giving corporation tax relief at 19 per cent on £130,000, which is £24,700.
Normally such expenditure would either fall within a company’s annual investment allowance and produce relief of only £19,000 or alternatively be tax-relieved at 18 per cent of the cost per annum.
Nigel May, partner at MHA MacIntyre Hudson, said: “Companies looking to use this relief will need to take care when the assets that the expenditure relates to are sold: tax charges may then arise clawing back the relief. It is perhaps worth noting that certain expenditure is excluded, in particular the acquisition of company cars.”
What

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Rishi Sunak eyes hiking corporation tax even higher to 25%

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Rishi Sunak is eyeing increasing corporation tax from 19% to 25% in the Budget next Wednesday, March 3.
Previously, it was thought the Chancellor was only considering going as high as 24 per cent.
The chancellor needs to raise money to help start paying off the staggering £394bn deficit the UK economy is facing because of Covid-19, not least the £71bn the Government has spent supporting businesses.
>See also: Self-employed to be offered fourth and final £7,500 grant in Budget
Each percentage point hiked on corporation tax rates raises another £3.3bn in revenue. This implies that the chancellor could raise nearly £20bn if he increases corporation tax to 25%.
Mr Sunak is also getting political cover to do this because his US counterpart, Janet Yellen, said recently that US corporation tax might rise from 21 per cent to 28 per cent. This would mean that the UK could still claim to have the lowest level of corporation tax in the G7 group of developed nations. According to the Times, the first increase is likely to be in the autumn budget, with subsequent rises.
Also, corporation tax revenue overwhelmingly comes from a number of enterprise-level companies and corporates, as opposed

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Self-employed to be offered fourth and final £7,500 grant in Budget

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Rishi Sunak is set to announce a fourth and final round of the £7,500 grant for the self-employed in next week’s Budget.
As before, certain self-employed will be able to claim a Self-Employment Income Support Scheme (SEIISS) grant worth up to £7,500 over three months covering February, March and April.
However, if true, next week’s announcement again ignores the over a million people who have been excluded from self-employed grants because either they have a parallel source of income or they pay themselves in dividends or they earn over £50,000 a year.
Last month, influential thinktank the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said the Government should act to help self-employed excluded from Covid support because more than 50 pe cent of their income came from elsewhere, an exclusion which disproportionately attacked women on modest incomes.
>See also: Government must help self-employed excluded due to 50% income rule
Meanwhile, business groups have written to Mr Sunak urging him to help the nearly 800,000 company directors frozen out of emergency Covid-19 support, which they saw as a stealth attack by HMRC because company directors pay corporation tax at the lower 19 per cent rate.
However, according to the Telegraph, the grant

Read more...

Rishi Sunak eyes hiking corporation tax even higher to 25%

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Rishi Sunak is eyeing increasing corporation tax from 19% to 25% in the Budget next Wednesday, March 3.
Previously, it was thought the Chancellor was only considering going as high as 24 per cent.
The chancellor needs to raise money to help start paying off the staggering £394bn deficit the UK economy is facing because of Covid-19, not least the £71bn the Government has spent supporting businesses.
>See also: Self-employed to be offered fourth and final £7,500 grant in Budget
Each percentage point hiked on corporation tax rates raises another £3.3bn in revenue. This implies that the chancellor could raise nearly £20bn if he increases corporation tax to 25%.
Mr Sunak is also getting political cover to do this because his US counterpart, Janet Yellen, said recently that US corporation tax might rise from 21 per cent to 28 per cent. This would mean that the UK could still claim to have the lowest level of corporation tax in the G7 group of developed nations. According to the Times, the first increase is likely to be in the autumn budget, with subsequent rises.
Also, corporation tax revenue overwhelmingly comes from a number of enterprise-level companies and corporates, as opposed

Read more...

Self-employed to be offered fourth and final £7,500 grant in Budget

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Rishi Sunak is set to announce a fourth and final round of the £7,500 grant for the self-employed in next week’s Budget.
As before, certain self-employed will be able to claim a Self-Employment Income Support Scheme (SEIISS) grant worth up to £7,500 over three months covering February, March and April.
However, if true, next week’s announcement again ignores the over a million people who have been excluded from self-employed grants because either they have a parallel source of income or they pay themselves in dividends or they earn over £50,000 a year.
Last month, influential thinktank the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said the Government should act to help self-employed excluded from Covid support because more than 50 pe cent of their income came from elsewhere, an exclusion which disproportionately attacked women on modest incomes.
>See also: Government must help self-employed excluded due to 50% income rule
Meanwhile, business groups have written to Mr Sunak urging him to help the nearly 800,000 company directors frozen out of emergency Covid-19 support, which they saw as a stealth attack by HMRC because company directors pay corporation tax at the lower 19 per cent rate.
However, according to the Telegraph, the grant

Read more...

Budget 2021 and what it means for small business

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Rishi Sunak is set to extend furlough and other Covid support for small business in next month’s Budget 2021 on March 3.
The chancellor is almost certain to also extend the current business rates suspension for many small businesses, while setting the scene for an online sales tax all retailers may have to pay later in the year.
In July it was revealed that the Treasury was considering a 2 per cent online sales tax to raise £2bn a year, giving physical shops an advantage when it comes to purchases made instore.
>See also: SME owners hold £1.2bn of personal liabilities linked to Covid-19 loans
Recent polling by Kekst CNC found that an online sales tax would be the most popular way of recouping some of the costs of the Covid crisis: 56 per cent of voters want online retailers to pay more tax.
One idea is that small businesses that sell online could offset their business rates against the online sales tax, giving high street shops a boost.
Meanwhile, 18 companies and organisations including Waterstones have urged Sunak to introduce a digital sales tax while reducing business rates.
Business rates are assessed every few years and based on rent

Read more...

Budget 2021 and what it means for small business

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Rishi Sunak is set to extend furlough and other Covid support for small business in next month’s Budget 2021 on March 3.
The chancellor is almost certain to also extend the current business rates suspension for many small businesses, while setting the scene for an online sales tax all retailers may have to pay later in the year.
In July it was revealed that the Treasury was considering a 2 per cent online sales tax to raise £2bn a year, giving physical shops an advantage when it comes to purchases made instore.
>See also: SME owners hold £1.2bn of personal liabilities linked to Covid-19 loans
Recent polling by Kekst CNC found that an online sales tax would be the most popular way of recouping some of the costs of the Covid crisis: 56 per cent of voters want online retailers to pay more tax.
One idea is that small businesses that sell online could offset their business rates against the online sales tax, giving high street shops a boost.
Meanwhile, 18 companies and organisations including Waterstones have urged Sunak to introduce a digital sales tax while reducing business rates.
Business rates are assessed every few years and based on rent

Read more...