Criminal tax offence plan risks going too far, warns CIOT
    
HMRC plans to introduce a tax avoidance  criminal offence risks overreach, the Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT)  has warned.
HMRC plans to create a new strict  liability criminal offence for failing to disclose notifiable arrangements  under the Disclosure of Tax Avoidance Schemes (DOTAS) regime without a  reasonable excuse.
The CIOT argues that DOTAS is much too  wide in its current formulation to be suitable for a criminal offence. Applying  the proposed offence to all the DOTAS hallmarks seems excessive, it adds.
This is especially true, since the  proposal is intended to be a response to specific issues with disguised  remuneration mass-marketed tax avoidance schemes, the CIOT warns.
John Barnett, CIOT's Vice President,  said:
'The government is right to be taking a  robust approach to those who continue to devise, promote or sell mass-marketed  tax avoidance schemes. There should be no place for such people and their  schemes in the tax services market.
'However, every proposal to increase  HMRC's powers like this needs to be tested against a hypothetical test of what  would happen if an HMRC officer decides to use or target the legislation  inappropriately.
'The present proposal places too high a  level of reliance on HMRC's unpublished (and as such, not transparent) internal  governance process to provide appropriate, independent safeguards and work  effectively, so that such an outcome could never happen in practice.
'It is essential for building and  maintaining trust in the tax system that the way HMRC use their powers and  operate safeguards can be effectively monitored and subjected to appropriate  oversight.'
Internet  link: CIOT