MrJusticeHMRC
4.1K posts

MrJusticeHMRC
@hmrc_mr
HMRC supervision worrying trends in tax policy powers and admin in the context of SMEs and individuals - themes: retro taxa, easy rides for rich and corporates
London, England Katılım Eylül 2018
2K Takip Edilen963 Takipçiler

CHELTENHAM DAY FOUR TIPS🚨🐎
After a great day three I have decided to send all my DAY 4 selections to EVERYBODY who likes and comments on this tweet TONIGHT.
(MUST be following) #CheltenhamFestival
LNAP@LeicesterNAP
Idem places at 80/1. King Alexander places at 33/1. Heartwood wins at 14/1 (payed out 8/1).
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🎩 FREE Wollie Hat Giveaway! 🎩
Want to get listed on bloodstockdirect.com/all-listings/ for FREE? We're looking for quality sellers, breeders, and partners to feature on our platform.
PLUS - Enter our Wollie hat giveaway:
✅ Like this post
✅ Share it with your network
✅ Comment below

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MrJusticeHMRC retweetledi

🚨 WOLLIE HAT GIVEAWAY 🚨
We’re giving away **2 Wollie Hats** before the cold snaps back.
✅ Like this post
✅ Retweet / Share
🌟 while also offering free listings 🌟
⏳ Closes *Sunday 27thMarch*
Winner announced right after close. Enter now.
bloodstockdirect.com

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@ChiefScrobbler @PulpLibrarian Yep he had well conditioned hair for a medieval outlaw
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@PulpLibrarian I really loved this back then; the tale of a New Romantic hairdresser and his bandit chums. Great soundtrack too.
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Robin of Sherwood (1984-86). HTV's "The Hooded Man" was an expensive show to make: filmed extensively on location each episode cost half a million pounds to produce!
Bristol based HTV partnered with Goldcrest Films to make it, and the series began with a two hour episode setting the mythic backstory and introducing the characters.
Two different actors played Robin. Michael Praed was Robin of Loxley for the first two seasons before his character was killed protecting Maid Marion from the Sherrif of Nottingham. Jason Connery took over as Robert of Huntingdon, selected by the mysterious Herne the Hunter to carry on the rebellion.
Clannad recorded the evocative theme tune and the show was a hit in the UK and popular in America. It's influenced the legend ever since, not least the 1991 movie Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.
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MrJusticeHMRC retweetledi


@chooserich Moving into the penthouse above you with all those MSTR$ shorts - keep the noise down
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@ChrisHowellFCA @JibbaJabb This is the building they used for external shots of poirot's flat in the itv series
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@JibbaJabb That's a large flat with balcony in a great part of London. The management is resident controlled, but its 100 yr old Art Deco building with a swimming pool and porter, and maintenance, major repairs and insurance costs will be high (not helped by Building Safety Regulator costs)
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Yours for just 775k plus 28k per annum service charge...oh and cash buyers only because it's unmortgageable.😌
#leasehold
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@NotRichYoungFa1 @itcontracting fresh madness from the ministry of mayhem
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@itcontracting Are HMRC really planning on ADDING figures for promoter fees to loans before then deducting up to £10k pa (from result)? This is totally against recommendations of #McCannReview.

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What the Ray McCann Loan Charge Review really changes for contractors
The detail behind November’s Budget reference matters more than the reference itself.
Ray McCann’s independent review and the government’s response — published together and running to more than 70 pages — set out the basis for a new settlement opportunity for those affected by the loan charge, with terms that differ in important ways from what came before.
In his analysis for ContractorUK, Thomas Wallace TEP ATT, director of tax investigations at WTT Group, explains what’s genuinely new, what remains unclear, and the practical issues contractors should consider when deciding how to respond.
This is not a one-size-fits-all decision — but understanding the mechanics is essential.
Full analysis of the Ray McCann Loan Charge Review 👇
contractoruk.com/news/what-ray-…

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@NotRichYoungFa1 @ComputerWeekly @CarrotyD @IainDale @LizKershawDJ @EamonnHolmes @NickFerrariLBC @ayeshahazarika @CamillaTominey @MichelleDewbs @BBCRosAtkins @vicderbyshire not to omit no equity of terms for those that have already settled ...
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@ComputerWeekly Unfortunately, whilst #McCannReview positive for some, especially with lower demands, it will fail to resolve #LoanChargescandal :-
- Pre-2010 excluded and face #s684.
- Post-2019 excluded.
- 41% aged 60 yrs+ and cannot sustain ttp.
Thank you @ComputerWeekly & @CarrotyD.

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UK government commits to Loan Charge settlement reforms in wake of independent review into policy bit.ly/3KrkuC4
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@helenjanefer51 @lionheart_jon @SarahEGabbai @Ray_McCann55 It is egregious that there is no revisiting of the settlement, re pre-2010 they may feel the biggest sums are to be found there, but there should be a fairer offer nonetheless
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@lionheart_jon @SarahEGabbai @Ray_McCann55 and for those who used the same schemes prior to 2010 and post 2017 who HMRC are still pursuing and who are not included within this current Review. How many people will actually benefit compared with those who won't?
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Glad to see that the Government has accepted (and in some cases gone even further than) the recommendations in @Ray_McCann55 ‘s independent Loan Charge review.
gov.uk/government/pub…
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@renwij @fionahtweet @Steven_Swinford exactly not particularly well written, there may be council taxes on FGH as well as a surcharge over £2m this was talked about amongst many other things...
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@fionahtweet @Steven_Swinford Lots of band F properties outside of London a lot less than a million. Lot of band e in London worth a lot more than a million.
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Exclusive:
Rachel Reeves will hit more than 100,000 of Britain’s most expensive properties with a surcharge worth an average of £4,500 as she seeks to balance the books by increasing taxes on the wealthy
The chancellor has pared back plans for the property tax, increasing the threshold at which it applies from £1.5 million to £2 million to ensure that the most expensive properties are affected
Reeves plans to raise £400-£450 million from the levy, which will be collected through council tax bills. More expensive homes will pay significantly more
The Treasury is expected to use the existing council tax system as the basis for the charge by revaluing 2.4 million of the most valuable properties across bands F, G and H
The Times has been told that the Office for Budget Responsibility, the budget watchdog, has suggested that the plans could lead to a slowdown at the top of the housing market
It highlighted the behavioural impact of the policy as there are concerns that fewer properties will be sold. A government source said that the impact on the housing market is expected to be minimal
A Whitehall source said: “The OBR has factored in a behavioural response to this with a knock-on effect on the housing market. It has a wider impact.”
Reeves was initially planning a broader version of the tax, which would have started at £1.5 million and hit 300,000 households. However, there were concerns that the move would affect people who are “asset rich and cash poor”, particularly in London, and the threshold has been raised
thetimes.com/article/b43b76…
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