Daily Mail

TAX SCANDAL RUINING LIVES

How thousands of self-employed face losing their homes and livelihood­s after innocently using a tax loophole

- By Ben Wilkinson and Samantha Partington b.wilkinson@dailymail.co.uk

MINISTERS are today urged to end the devastatin­g pursuit of selfemploy­ed workers who legally cut their tax bills up to 20 years ago.

More than 50,000 contract workers — including nurses, teachers, and small business owners — have been hit with backdated tax demands for as much as hundreds of thousands of pounds. The controvers­ial Loan Charge — which aims to claw back unpaid taxes from as far back as 1999 — has been linked to suicides and bankruptcy.

Writing in Money Mail, former Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith today calls on Boris Johnson’s new government to immediatel­y suspend the tax hunt and launch a review.

The former Tory Party leader last week said he was ‘ashamed’ of his government for allowing it to go ahead. HMRC is using the Loan Charge to demand tax they say was avoided using ‘disguised remunerati­on’ schemes.

These involved paying workers using tax-free loans from offshore trusts that did not need to be paid back. By paying the workers a loan, it meant employers did not need to pay income tax and National Insurance contributi­ons. The Loan Charge, announced in the 2016 Budget, made any outstandin­g loans on April 5 this year taxable income. This means freelancer­s who used the legal loophole face a retrospect­ive tax bill on all their income since 1999 that was paid using the loans.

HMRC expects to claw back £3.2 billion before the repayment deadline of January 31.

But a Treasury sub-committee report last month warned the charge was causing ‘widespread anxiety and distrust’. Campaigner­s have linked it to five suicides, and more than 150 MPs have joined an All-Party Parliament­ary Group to highlight concerns that many will be made bankrupt or have to sell their homes.

Boris Johnson promised to order an independen­t review at leadership hustings earlier this summer, but months on, HMRC is still demanding the huge sums be repaid.

Terry Brooker, 58, was told to pay £240,000 back tax from his work as an IT contractor for Her Majesty’s Customs and Excise (HMCE) and the Metropolit­an Police in the early 2000s.

A freelancin­g friend had recommende­d the scheme. Terry says if the taxman had told him not to use the scheme, he would never have agreed to it. He says the umbrella firm — based on the Isle of Man — took around 15 pc of his income in fees. He missed out on pension contributi­ons, holiday and sick pay that employees normally get.

The father- of- two, from Colchester, says: ‘It is absolutely horrendous, it is just so unfair.

‘You cannot expect me to now pay six years’ worth of tax given I believed there was nothing wrong with what I was doing.’

After recovering from breast cancer, a social worker we’ll just call Beverley, decided not to go back full-time and registered as self-employed instead.

She set up a limited company to work as a locum and receive payments from her agency.

But in 2016, she was told by her agency she could no longer use a limited company because of a new law called IR35. She has to use an umbrella company instead. Weeks later, the motherof-three says she was contacted by Smart Pay which said it would manage her earnings and she would get to keep at least 90 pc of her income.

Beverley, 50, from Manchester, says: ‘[The caller] had a very shiny sales pitch. I questioned how it worked but he said there was nothing to worry about; they had been operating the loan payment scheme for years.

‘He said it was perfectly legal and if HMRC queried anything with us, I should tell them to contact Smart Pay.’

Two years later, she received a letter from HMRC telling her she would be investigat­ed.

Beverley, who quit the scheme immediatel­y, says: ‘It came like a bolt out of the blue. I am not a tax expert and I feel naive for following their advice.’

She is still unsure how much she will have to pay, but fears it may be up to £20,000.

She says: ‘We are an everyday

working- class family, we don’t have that type of money. I am filled with horror every time a letter arrives.’

Smart Pay did not respond to a request for comment.

Loan Charge Action Group (LCAG) has launched a campaign for a judicial review into the charge.

Tax barrister Keith Gordon, of Temple Tax Chambers in London, says the law could be a breach of human rights. He says many workers had to sign up to the scheme in order to get paid, and were given no indication they were doing anything wrong.

‘A lot of the contractor­s were not doing it to avoid paying tax, but to do their job,’ he says. ‘And HMRC, by failing to make enough noise, gave the impression it was acceptable.’ Mike Cherry, the Federation of Small Businesses national chairman, has called on the Government to review the charge. He says: ‘Retrospect­ive tax grabs make it impossible to plan for the future. Many who are playing fair with their tax affairs today will be wondering where else the Government might suddenly change the rules.’

An HMRC spokesman says: ‘The Loan Charge is designed to tackle tax avoidance and ensure everyone pays their fair share. It builds on more than two decades of HMRC action to challenge these schemes. The Prime Minister will be setting out more details on the Government’s policy agendas over the next few months.’

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