Darling caves in to non-dom tax resistance

Chancellor Darling has made a major back down on his non-dom tax, dropping many planned disclosure rules

Written by AccountancyAge.com

Bowing to fierce opposition from business leaders, city banks and government advisers alike, the chancellor has made significant concessions over his crackdown on non-domiciled UK residents, dropping several of his planned financial disclosure rules.

In a letter ‘clarifying’ the issue yesterday, David Hartnett, HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) acting chairman, withdrew some of the most contentious features of the non-dom plan. However, the plans to charge long-standing non-doms a £30,000 annual levy still stands, but other measures are watered down considerably.

These include no longer asking for detailed information about offshore trusts; not taxing works of art brought into the UK for public display; and not taxing money brought into the UK to pay the £30,000 levy.

The Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners (STEP), whose members advise 22,000 wealthy non-doms, warned the concessions were inadequate. ‘This is not a U-turn and the City should not stand down,’ Keith Johnston, STEP director of policy, told The Daily Telegraph:

Further reading:

Darling signals rethink on non-dom tax

Tycoon threatens to quit UK in non-dom furore

Read story in The Daily Telegraph

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