Channel slams Customs over VAT fraud proposal

Plans to implement Reverse Charge system deemed overly restrictive by resellers

By James Sherwood

24 Jul 2006

Be the first to comment

  • Digg
  • Tweet

Channel players have condemned plans by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) to implement its controversial ‘Reverse Charge’ strategy in the UK by October if it is approved by the European Commission (EC).

In January, HMRC applied to the EC for powers to change the way tax was collected in certain sectors of the IT industry, including mobile phones, chips and processors, which are most susceptible to missing trader or carousel fraud (CRN, 6 February). Known as Reverse Charge, the strategy means the purchaser of the goods, rather than the seller, is liable for VAT. Last week, HMRC announced that Reverse Charge could become law in the UK as early as October, provided it is approved by the EC.

According to government figures, the UK’s annual VAT losses through carousel fraud stands at between £1.1bn and £1.9bn. An HMRC representative told CRN: “This measure is targeted on those goods used in the majority of missing trader intra-community fraud cases.

“We recognise that this is a significant change in the treatment of VAT on the goods and we will work closely with business and tax advisers to minimise any cost and disruption to genuine businesses.”

However, Fritz Johnson, financial director at storage distributor Hammer, slammed the proposal.

“This shows a complete lack of understanding in implementation time required,” he said. “The bureaucracy this would create for the channel would be immense.”

Phil Hemmings, director of corporate affairs at reseller Research Machines, told CRN: “Any new taxation system that is brought in over a relatively short timeframe will cause problems.”

Andy Cordial, director of storage manufacturer and distributor Origin Storage Solutions, said: “An October deadline would be very tight. It would need at least six months.”

Anthony Elliot-Square, chairman of the Federation of Technological Industries, told CRN: “As an anti-fraud measure this sounds strong, but the devil will be in the detail.

“Any measure to tackle fraudsters is good, so long as it doesn’t hurt innocent traders.”

>> Further reading:

HMRC wants VAT change

Channel left guessing as EC decides on VAT rules

EC recognises need to revise aging VAT rules

display:none
Loading
We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions

Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Will Apple's attitude to the channel change in 2012?

51%

21%

27%

1%

CRN Partner Connect 2012

CRN Partner Connect logo

CRN's premier networking event is back on 17 May at the Ricoh Arena

Date: Thu 17 May 2012

CRN Fight Night 2012

One of the fights from CRN Fight Night 2010

Channel fighters preparing to square up once more on 24 May

Date: Thu 24 May 2012

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Submit your email address and we'll send a link to a personal newsletter control panel

fragment image

The mobile enterprise: Secure the data, not the device

The proliferation of endpoint devices within the enterprise has highlighted the shortcomings of one of the traditional approaches to data security

fragment image

Measuring the ROI of Google Apps

This Forrester report compares the costs and benefits of legacy email and productivity software with Google Apps


Dave the dealer blog

Dave the dealer

Clocking off

Dave discovers that rozzers are seemingly living in the technology dark ages

View from the channel

Views from the Channel

Departing CEO has done Dixons a service

Mark Needham, founder of distributor Widget, argues that John Browett leaves for Apple with Dixons in better shape than when he arrived

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.