AS2012: No net rises in taxes
Chancellor George Osborne claims there are not net tax rises in the Autumn Statement
Chancellor George Osborne claims there are not net tax rises in the Autumn Statement
NO NET TAX RISES have been made in the Autumn Statement delivered by George Osborne.
The chancellor claims that any tax increases will be offset by tax cuts later in the budget.
More about:
In the past decade, the professional services industry has transformed significantly. Digital disruptions, increased competition, and changing market ...
View resourceIn recent months, professional services firms are facing more pressure than ever to deliver value to clients. Often, clients look at the firms own inf...
View resourceIn a world of instant results and automated workloads, the potential for AP to drive insights and transform results is enormous. But, if you’re still ...
View resourceThe first phase of Making Tax Digital (MTD) saw the requirement for the digital submission of the VAT Return using compliant software. That’s now behi...
View resourceBillions of pounds of infrastructure investment planned; but tax tinkering still looms following Philip Hammond's first Autumn Statement Read More...
View articleCarter Backer Winter tax partner Robert Maas assesses the chancellor's work in the Autumn Statement 2015 Read More...
View articleColin enjoyed the irony in Autumn Statement and Black Friday coinciding Read More...
View articleWith a virtual windfall finding its way to George Osborne, a soon-to-be virtual tax department will need to really up its game to increase tax receipt...
View articleJohn Whiting looks at what the Autumn Statement had to say on tax simplification Read More...
View articleA round-up of the papers' reactions to this week's Autumn Statement Read More...
View articleMajor concern raised among business groups that SMEs will be caught out by the apprenticeship levy Read More...
View articleSpending Review and policy decisions mean tens of billions of pounds should be in the Treasury's coffers based on Osborne's plans - but there's little...
View article