It turns out the taxman needs one because Adam Hart-Davis, the TV history and science boffin who has fronted self-assessment promotion for the past few years cannot be relied upon to back his paymasters.
In a Radio Five interview he said he wished tax was simpler and that it was too complex. In short, the man who told us on national television that tax didn’t have to be taxing, actually thought that it was.
But, no offence to Hart-Davis, he perhaps was never the right man for the job. This is not because he failed to exude intelligence and honesty, he certainly does it’s because he failed to address a key need for HMRC it’s need to depart from the image of the taxman being grey-haired, middle aged, male and white. For those who can remember that far back that was the image of the pinstriped, bowler hat wearing cartoon mascot for the Revenue, Hector the tax inspector. After him came Mrs Doyle, the accident prone tea lady from Father Ted, an effort to make the taxman cool by appealing to the comedy tastes of the youthful.
As watchable as he may be, Hart-Davis embodied many of the things HMRC wanted to escape. His departure from the role is an opportunity to put the marketing right and set the right image for tax payers.
To do this, however, a parallel effort must be made to make taxpaying simpler, including making online systems work reliably. Self-assessment is going in the right direction, but there is a bigger effort required. Hart-Davis was certainly not alone in his views. There’s no point in having quality marketing without having something of quality to market.



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