- Rogue or ‘phoenix’ firms have exploited Covid measures to
embezzle large sums of public during the
pandemic
In a report today the Public Accounts Committee says COVID19 has
“changed the nature and scale of tax debt” and there’s an
“enormous task” for HMRC to bring tax debt back from the current
“mountain” of £39 billion to the pre-pandemic level of £16
billion. The Committee says “to achieve this fairly, and without
harming economic recovery, HMRC will need to strike a difficult
balance” - actively pursuing those who can pay their tax debts
but are choosing not to, while supporting individuals and
businesses struggling with the ongoing impact of the pandemic
that “has left more taxpayers in vulnerable circumstances and
less able to cope with their debts”.
The PAC has particular concerns about “rogue or ‘phoenix’ firms
that have been able to exploit the temporary restrictions on
insolvency action and the availability of covid support grants
and loans to embezzle large sums during the pandemic”.
HMRC “does not know how long it might take to reduce the debt
balance to pre-pandemic levels and has not clearly articulated a
clear plan or set out a detailed timescale to give the PAC
confidence it can manage the challenge it now faces”. The longer
that tax remains uncollected, the greater the risk that HMRC will
never collect it. This is unfair to the majority of taxpayers
paying their fair share and results in a loss to the exchequer.
The PAC says HMRC needs more effective communications with
taxpayers, a better understanding of taxpayers’ ability to repay
debt and whether it should make more - or less - use of private
sector firms to help collect debts.
, Chair of the Public Accounts Committee,
said: “You might be forgiven for thinking we’ve
magically found that tree after all - the public purse is
rattling but a chunk of the tax revenues needed to refill it have
not been collected. Add to that the pandemic and record
inflation, and HMRC has a tricky balance to strike. Those least
able to afford rising bills, including tax bills, are also the
easiest collection “targets”. HMRC must tread carefully, taking a
sensitive approach that supports a renewing economy, and doesn’t
necessarily include bailiffs coming knocking.
“At the same time, HMRC’s challenges chasing down high-wealth
individuals and companies who take advantage of every trick in
the book to avoid and evade tax and outrun the law are
well-known. Those tricks are just not available to ordinary
people, now emerging from the misery of the pandemic into an
exploding cost of living crisis. HMRC must push much harder at
the doors - no matter where they are - of those who are not
paying their fair share.”
PAC report conclusions and
recommendations
-
We are not satisfied that HMRC has a clear plan to
tackle the mountain of tax debt which has built up during the
pandemic. At £39 billion in November 2021, tax debt is
more than double the £16 billion it was before the pandemic.
HMRC must also manage an additional 2.4 million taxpayers who,
on average, owe more money and require longer to pay. Despite
the sums of money involved, HMRC could only provide a vague
timeframe for when the level of debt will return to
pre-pandemic levels. It has also not updated its forecast of
debt at the end of the 2021-22 financial year to account for
the recent ‘Plan B’ action taken by government. HMRC expects
the debt balance at year end will be higher than the £33
billion it had forecast in September 2021, but could not say
how much higher. The debt balance has reduced considerably from
its high point of £67 billion at August 2020, but the debt
which is left is likely to be the toughest to collect and rates
of repayment have slowed. The main cause for bad (unpaid) debts
is insolvencies and, while HMRC has increased the provision it
makes in its accounts for bad debts, it faces an unknown
backlog of insolvency cases.
Recommendation: Within the next six months, HMRC should
develop, and share with the Committee, a plan to manage the
increased levels of debt back down to pre-pandemic levels within
a specific timeframe. The plan should include:
- Long-term forecasts for tax debt, including the target levels
it will achieve at the end of each financial year with its
planned resources.
- Far more transparency about the level of write-offs and
remissions HMRC is providing for. In particular, in what
financial year the tax debts written off and remitted in each of
the past five years were incurred, and HMRC’s targeted levels of
write-offs and remissions over the next five years.
- Contingency arrangements, detailing how HMRC will manage debt
levels, and write-offs and remissions, under a range of
scenarios, including if further variants of COVID-19 emerge.
-
HMRC is not being ambitious enough in bringing down
debt levels and securing the resources this will
require. The longer a debt is left, the harder it is
to collect. The increase in tax debt and the number of
taxpayers in debt also increases HMRC’s debt management
workload. We are concerned that a lack of appropriately trained
HMRC staff will lead to more debt going unpaid. HMRC’s debt
management team had made staff reductions before the pandemic
to improve efficiency. Its planned recruitment in 2021-22 will
only close the current shortfall in staffing of 300 FTE. HMRC
makes limited use of private sector debt collection agencies to
increase its capacity to work with specific customer groups.
HMRC has additional funding over the next three years (of £40m,
£60m and £90m) for “spend to raise” work but has not decided
whether any of this will be used for debt recovery, despite
this work bringing in at least £18 for every £1 spent. HMRC has
been successful in securing additional funds from HM Treasury
for time-limited recruitment, but we are concerned that the
long-term uncertainty associated with this approach may prevent
HMRC from planning effectively and protecting value for money.
The Committee has raised this issue before on HMRC’s compliance
work, which also offers high rates of return.
Recommendation: There is a clear value for money case to
increase debt management capacity. HMRC should set out how much
more tax debt it can bring in with increased levels of capacity
using private sector and public sector options and write to the
Committee alongside its Treasury Minute response with its
findings and the actions it is taking to maximise value for
money.
-
Rogue companies are exploiting the pandemic to profit
at the expense of taxpayers. We are concerned that
rogue firms have been able to exploit temporary restrictions on
insolvency action and the availability of covid support grants
and loans to embezzle large sums during the pandemic. In
particular, there is an increased risk from ‘phoenix’ companies
(whereby individuals continue the same trade through a series
of companies that are wound up, usually to avoid paying debts).
While the NAO found that HMRC held no data on the scale of
phoenix activity in the past, HMRC asserted that the number of
such companies has not increased. It was not clear to us how it
can be certain that this is the case, or how much taxpayer
money is at risk, without management information. HMRC is
developing a strategy to combat phoenix companies and is
beginning to use new powers alongside its existing approaches
to identify, and bring sanctions against, individuals involved
in this practice.
Recommendation: Alongside the Treasury Minute response to
this report, HMRC should provide the Committee with a summary of
substantive work it has undertaken to:
- Estimate the number of rogue companies at risk of defaulting
and the value of the tax at risk.
- Ensure commensurate resources are in place to prevent such
fraudulent activity.
HMRC should be prepared to bring the full force of the law to
bear on those who defraud the Exchequer, and report publicly and
regularly to Parliament on the numbers prosecuted.
-
HMRC is far behind where it needs to be in making good
use of data to manage debt effectively. Over a decade
ago, in 2009, HMRC told our predecessor committee that it
planned to take an incremental approach to gradually link debts
in different IT systems. This would create a single customer
record, which we agreed was needed. Yet, 13 years later, HMRC
still records details for different taxes on different IT
systems and has no straightforward way to combine them. Current
cross-government work to bring together all debts individual
customers owe to government departments will not bear fruit
within the next three years. When HMRC agrees a debt repayment
plan with a customer, it seeks to consider their overall
position, including expenditure and non-tax debts. But it
currently has no means of knowing this until it speaks to them,
while the private sector agencies with whom HMRC works, do
access private sector data that can identify other customer
debts. HMRC is running a pilot to determine whether purchasing
private sector data would be cost effective. It is also
exploring how to identify what methods of contact are most
effective to tailor contact to individual taxpayers.
Recommendation: HMRC should write to the Committee within
six months, to provide an update on:
- How much it has spent on the single customer record so far,
how much it expects to spend to complete this work, and when it
expects to complete this work.
- The scope of its work with the rest of government to share
data and take a more customer orientated approach, and the
timeframe over which it expects to complete this work.
- The results of its pilot test using private sector data and
plans for further use.
-
HMRC is not using all relevant data sources to
understand how the pandemic is affecting taxpayer’s ability to
repay. The pandemic has had a varied economic impact,
with some groups improving their financial position during the
pandemic while others have been negatively affected. HMRC
used data it already held, on business customers’ revenue,
staffing and use of employment support schemes, to identify how
severely they were affected by the pandemic. However, HMRC has
not used business sector data – and does not plan to. We
believe that sectoral data is likely to become more important
over time as the pandemic continues to affect business sectors
differently and, as government support schemes close, data
about which customers accessed these schemes will be less
informative about their current situation. HMRC told us that it
does not wish to drive any viable business to the wall by
pushing them to repay debt too quickly, but we cannot see how
HMRC will be able to make informed judgements about how hard it
chases customers without understanding the context in which
they operate.
Recommendation: HMRC should identify and obtain the data
sources which are most relevant to understand the ongoing impact
of the pandemic on businesses. As a minimum we would expect HMRC
to make use of sectoral data.
-
We are concerned that HMRC is not doing enough to
identify vulnerable people who need extra support with their
debts. The pandemic has left more people in vulnerable
positions, such as managing serious illness, bereavement and
with low resilience to financial shocks. The Financial Conduct
Authority has reported a 15% increase in the number of adults
who met one of their characteristics of vulnerability. Yet HMRC
has not seen an increase in the number of customers it
identifies as being vulnerable. Around 1,400 customers
currently access help from its Extra Support Team, a tiny
fraction of the 6.2 million customers with tax debt. HMRC is
adopting the vulnerability toolkit developed by the Cabinet
Office to better identify vulnerable customers. However, we are
concerned that, despite this, HMRC may be failing to identify
vulnerable people, and that it may therefore fail to provide
them with extra support because it doesn’t understand actual
need. HMRC acknowledges that the number of vulnerable customers
it has identified looks lower than it would expect and that the
take-up of some of its offers of support, such as the Breathing
Space scheme, is low.
Recommendation: HMRC should ensure regular and adequate
training is in place for staff and it should carry out research
to independently estimate how many vulnerable people are affected
by tax debt and how effectively it is identifying those customers
and write to us with its findings.