The Scotsman

No such thing as a free stamp duty holiday

- David Alexander David Alexander is managing director of DJ Alexander

Originally scheduled to close at the end of this month, the stamp duty holiday in England and Wales is set to continue before finally tapering to a close on 30 September.

By that time around half a million homebuyers south of the Border will have benefited from the initiative to the tune of £3.4 billion, according to research by the comparison website, Getagent.

This is in contrast to Scotland where the government ended its somewhat reduced LBTT holiday (the limit here was £250,000 compared to £500,000 in England) on 31 March, albeit providing one crumb of comfort in permanentl­y increasing the threshold for zero LBTT from £125,000 to £145,000.

Holyrood’s stance seemed to me to be self-defeating because the “holiday” was as much about boosting confidence as saving homebuyers money.

History has shown, again and again, that in the UK at least, a confident housing market and economy go hand in hand and the fact that the market not only survived, but flourished, in the face of Covid-19 undoubtedl­y has taken off some of the wider economic pressure brought about by this pandemic.

As for the financial considerat­ions, it will be interestin­g to learn the actual net cost to the Westminste­r government of the stamp duty concession.

The anticipate­d drop in Treasury takings will no doubt have been alleviated to some extent by the amount of tax taken from higher-value house sales that would not have happened had the current “boom” (partially inspired by the “holiday”) not taken place.

In 40 years of paying business and personal taxes I have come to learn that government­s – of all persuasion­s – have a knack of making up for lost tax of one sort with more tax of another, either directly or by stealthier methods.

For example, senior politician­s continue to insist that homeowners do not, nor will they ever, pay tax on the sales of their first and only homes. Strictly that is true but the deeper one digs it becomes more of a grey area.

Currently relatively few people, even those who own their own homes outright, consider themselves wealthy enough for their estates ever to be subject to inheritanc­e tax (IHT) after death. Therefore it comes as a shock when some of them learn this might be the case.

And it is mainly, though not wholly, down to residentia­l property values. Currently IHT is payable (at 40 per cent) on anything above £325,000 on a deceased’s assets, unless the assets are bequeathed to a spouse or civil partner.

This threshold has remained at this level since 2009 and the Chancellor has stated that it will not rise again until at least 2025.

Therefore, over a quarter of a century thousands of home-owners (even of relatively-modest properties if located in hot spots) will have become potential IHT “targets” simply because of rising house prices.

Some say that is only fair given that such asset growth required little or no skill or effort but that is only true to a certain extent.therefore, while an unapologet­ic supporter of the stamp duty holiday for the reasons stated earlier, I’ve a feeling that somehow, sometime down the line those homebuyers who benefited will end up paying it back.

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 ??  ?? 0 Made of money – property is safe investment
0 Made of money – property is safe investment

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