Daily Mail

Taxman’s plot to trawl your bank account... but not tell you

- By Jack Doyle and James Burton j.doyle@dailymail.co.uk

THE taxman is to be given ‘shocking’ new powers to trawl bank accounts without the holders being told.

A policy document, published quietly online this week, reveals HMRC wants to be able to keep secret investigat­ions into whether someone is paying the right amount of tax.

Under existing rules, banks and other financial institutio­ns are permitted to notify their customers if tax officials demand access to their bank statements and other financial informatio­n.

But as part of a bonfire of safeguards,

‘A lazy shortcut for HMRC’

in future the taxman will be able to draw a veil of secrecy over its investigat­ions.

Last night critics condemned the move – which is part of an aggressive tax crackdown – saying it is a breach of privacy.

James Daley, the managing director of Fairer Finance, said: ‘The system we have got contains essential protection­s for taxpayers’ privacy and rights. The idea that HMRC can request informatio­n from people’s bank, from state agents and other third parties without notifying the individual is shocking.

‘They are bypassing checks and balances that are there to protect people. Of course we want to crack down on people who aren’t paying their taxes but there has to be a balance between that and breaching privacy. This can’t be a lazy shortcut for the taxman.’

The new powers relate to socalled informatio­n orders, used to check that someone is paying the right amount of income, capital gains tax, corporatio­n tax and VAT. Hundreds of such orders were issued last year to try to crack down on tax evasion and discover if someone has hidden assets.

They can be used to order banks, building societies, accountant­s, lawyers and estate agents to hand over detailed informatio­n held on someone under investigat­ion.

But officials say the process is too bureaucrat­ic, takes too long and uses up a ‘disproport­ionate amount of resources’.

Foreign government­s have complained that it is so ‘onerous’, they are discourage­d from making a request for informatio­n when investigat­ing someone with a connection to the UK, the policy document says.

Now HMRC says the safeguards attached to the existing policy are ‘disproport­ionate’ and take up too much of officials’ time.

Currently banks which receive a request for informatio­n are not legally barred from telling the account holder. But the document states that ‘this runs the risk of the taxpayer being told about the notice’. In future, with the approval of a tribunal, banks and other ‘third parties’ will be banned from alerting their customer.

The document also sets out plans to limit judicial oversight.

Currently, if HMRC asks a taxpayer if they can access financial informatio­n and the taxpayer refuses, officials need permission from a tribunal to go ahead.

In future, such probes will be signed off in house in cases which are not kept secret. A judge will have to sign off informatio­n orders used in secret, however.

The powers are likely to be used to target internatio­nal tax dodgers, but they will also be available for use in ‘domestic’ cases.

Critics warned relaxing the rules could mean the powers are used much more widely. There were 215 such requests last year.

John O’Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: ‘Giving the taxman powers to access taxpayers’ bank accounts without notifying them is a sinister step that would undermine fundamenta­l freedoms. ‘HMRC gets basic tax informatio­n incorrect for millions of people every single year, so the thought of bungling bureaucrat­s having direct access to people’s bank accounts is deeply troubling.’

Justin Modray of consumer advice group Candid Money said: ‘Anything that gives the taxman more power to dive into your finances is a concern.

‘There are people who do evade tax, and the more that’s clamped down on, the better. But the fear for ordinary people is that HMRC could be poking around in your bank account and you wouldn’t know anything about it.’

An HMRC spokesman said: ‘’We are considerin­g a range of options to improve the flow of informatio­n to help establish the right tax has been declared.

‘Nothing has been decided. If these powers became law, we expect they would only apply to a few hundred cases each year.’

‘Bungling bureaucrat­s’

IT is an Orwellian world in which State investigat­ors can harvest – in total secret – private informatio­n from your bank, estate agent, accountant and lawyer.

Yet this power – to secretly rifle through your bank account without your knowledge – is set to be handed to the taxman.

It’s bad enough that, thanks to George Osborne, HMRC busybodies can seize tax directly from accounts without permission, now they want carte blanche to conduct secret fishing expedition­s as well.

And what hope for privacy, when HMRC is notoriousl­y incompeten­t, and was responsibl­e for losing the computer records of 25million Britons?

Yes, everyone should pay the tax they owe, and criminal evaders should face the toughest penalties.

But that is no reason for driving a coach and horses through one of the most fundamenta­l principles of justice – that it should be open.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom