- ‘Tax gap’ running at 5.1% of annual liabilities; £42
  billion total in unpaid tax   
  - Unacceptable customer service levels unlikely to
  improve quickly 
  - HMRC aims to recover only a quarter of fraud losses in
  Covid support like furlough 
  HMRC collected £731.1 billion in taxes and duties in 2021-22, the
  highest on record, reflecting the end of the acute phase of the
  pandemic. But in a report today the Public Accounts Committee
  says HMRC is still not deploying the resources required to
  maximise the tax revenues it collects or provide an acceptable
  level of customer service. At a time of huge strain for the
  public finances £42 billion is owed in unpaid tax, and HMRC is
  failing to collect around 5% of the tax it is owed each
  year.  
  In an historic cost of living crisis, HMRC must target scarce
  resources to ensure businesses and individuals who are able to
  pay, do. For every £1 HMRC spends on compliance activities, it
  recovers £18 in additional tax revenue. The failure to better
  resource compliance means Government is missing the opportunity
  to recover billions in lost revenue. 
  The Committee is unconvinced plans to address HMRC’s
  ‘unacceptable’ customer service will sustainably reduce demand or
  deal with the poor level of service quickly enough.  
  HMRC also lacks ambition to tackle fraud and error and recover
  losses. It only expects to recover around a quarter of the
  estimated £4.5 billion lost to fraud and error in its COVID-19
  support schemes. Fraud and error are also high for research and
  development tax reliefs, which are ‘costly, prone to abuse and
  provide questionable benefit to the UK economy’. Problems with
  VAT’s susceptibility to fraud appear to be better managed in
  other European jurisdictions. 
   , Chair of the Committee, said: “The
  eye-watering £42 billion now owed to HMRC in unpaid taxes would
  have filled a lot of this year’s infamous public spending black
  hole. But the public purse will continue missing out on billions
  of desperately needed revenues as HMRC will only employ more
  staff to tackle compliance over the next few years – not fast
  enough to dent the tax gap at a time of huge public sector
  spending pressures. Meanwhile taxpayers battle customer services
  that need improvement. 
  “The PAC has reported on the many problems in the Covid support
  schemes that made an open goal for fraudsters, but HMRC is
  settling for trying to recover less than a quarter of estimated
  losses in schemes such as furlough. We recognise the problems
  HMRC faces - due to poor controls, the horse has bolted - but we
  believe there is a moral duty to pursue fraud. HMRC must ensure
  dishonesty is not seen to create advantage.” 
  PAC report conclusions and
  recommendations 
  - 
    HMRC has not yet returned to setting a formal
    compliance yield target, against which it can be meaningfully
    held accountable.HMRC has not set a formal target
    since 2020-21 because of the uncertainty caused by the
    pandemic, and instead has published expectations for its
    compliance yield that it uses to manage its performance rather
    than as an accountability mechanism. For 2022-23, HMRC is
    aiming to achieve a compliance yield of £36 billion. This yield
    may include compliance cases opened several years ago. High
    inflation provides a further challenge to HMRC being able to
    effectively measure and understand underlying changes in its
    performance. Increased revenues and yields due to inflation
    will make it easier for HMRC to achieve historic rates of
    compliance yield. HMRC will therefore need to establish what is
    a genuine change in performance from a change in underlying
    revenues. 
  
 
  Recommendation: HMRC should return to a formal compliance
  yield target with HM Treasury from April 2023 and report the
  target publicly. In doing so, targets should take account of
  inflation and economic factors, for example by setting the target
  relative to tax revenue. 
  - 
    Resourcing HMRC’s compliance work to maintain rather
    than reduce the tax gap means the government is missing out on
    billions in lost revenue. HMRC estimates that the tax
    gap - the difference between the amount of tax that should, in
    theory be paid to HMRC, and what was actually paid - was £32
    billion in 2020-21, or 5.1% of all tax liabilities, the same
    proportion as in 2019-20. This masks changes in the tax gap for
    each category of tax, with the tax gap for VAT decreasing while
    the tax gap for Corporation Tax, excise duties and income tax
    Self-Assessment increasing in 2020-21. HMRC bases its
    compliance performance and resourcing on maintaining the tax
    gap and stopping it from growing. However, there remains scope
    for reducing it; for every £1 that HMRC spends on compliance
    activities, it recovers £18 in additional tax revenue. The
    pandemic has created more uncertainty in the data that HMRC
    uses to estimate the tax gap, but HMRC does not currently
    report the range of uncertainty in its headline estimate. HMRC
    told us that this would be difficult to do, but possible. 
  
 
  Recommendations: 
  - HMRC should set out what level of
  investment in its compliance teams would be needed to reduce the
  size of the tax gap, and confirm what, if any, intention it has
  to pursue this.  
  
 
  - HMRC should also calculate and
  report an uncertainty range for its headline tax gap estimate to
  provide more transparency to users of the estimate.  
  
 
  - 
    HMRC’s plan to only recover a quarter of losses due to
    fraud and error on its COVID-support schemes does not go far
    enough.HMRC estimates that total error and fraud
    across the lifetime of the COVID-support schemes is £4.5
    billion, representing 4.6% of the £96.9 billion total support
    provided. This is lower than HMRC’s previous estimate, though
    the actual level of fraud and error remains very uncertain.
    HMRC has drawn together a wider set of data to improve its
    estimate, but this is limited by the shortage of data that HMRC
    collected on taxpayers’ working patterns at the time the
    schemes were running. HMRC has been given £100 million to fund
    a temporary taskforce to investigate fraud and error on the
    schemes and has opened about 40,000 investigations so far.
    However, of the £4.5 billion in fraud and error losses, HMRC
    forecasts by the time the taskforce closes it will have
    recovered only around £1.1 billion, with the rate of return for
    the funding expected to be less than if invested in tax
    compliance. HMRC is yet to demonstrate it has done all it
    reasonably can to recover the losses and avoid the dent to
    public finances. HMRC risks rewarding those taxpayers that were
    dishonest if it does not pursue more of the losses than
    currently planned.  
  
 
  Recommendation: In determining what further recovery
  action to take on fraud and error on the COVID-19 support
  schemes, HMRC should: 
  - keep under review the return on
  investment of spending more resources on recovery; and 
  
 
  - set out how it will ensure it
  maintains a level playing field for individuals and businesses
  that did not abuse the schemes, rather than being seen to reward
  those that were dishonest. 
  
 
  - 
    We are concerned that HMRC may be lagging behind other
    established tax authorities in preventing fraudulent VAT
    registrations. HMRC is constantly changing its
    processes to prevent criminals from exploiting the tax system.
    VAT is particularly susceptible to fraud and criminality as it
    can involve HMRC repaying large amounts to taxpayers. We raised
    concerns about a case where a criminal used a legitimate
    company’s details to apply for a VAT registration number and
    make fraudulent VAT repayment claims. We understand that the
    criminal was successful in the UK, but that safeguards adopted
    by the German tax authorities appeared more effective at
    identifying similar fraudulent activities at an earlier
    stage.  
  
 
  Recommendation: HMRC should engage with its international
  counterparts to understand what lessons it can learn in
  preventing fraudulent VAT registrations and minimising the impact
  on honest taxpayers. 
  - 
    Taxpayers and their agents are still not receiving an
    acceptable level of customer service. In the last five
    years, HMRC has reduced its customer service staff numbers from
    25,500 to 19,500. During the pandemic, HMRC’s performance in
    replying to post or handling calls fell significantly, partly
    because it did not have sufficient customer service staff to
    manage the pressures that the pandemic brought. We were
    surprised to learn that at times in the past, HMRC has simply
    closed its telephone line when it could not cope with demand.
    It is not acceptable not to answer calls from people who are
    trying to pay the government money. HMRC’s plan for improving
    customer service is to continue digitalising the tax system,
    moving people away from phone and post onto online systems.
    Taxpayers report being more satisfied with HMRC’s digital
    services than its phone and post services. However, we are not
    convinced that its plans will sustainably reduce demand for
    traditional channels or deal with the unacceptable level of
    service that taxpayers and agents are currently suffering. The
    move to online services will not happen quickly and will not be
    appropriate for all circumstances or customers. 
  
 
  Recommendation: HMRC should write to the Committee setting
  out its plan to improve customer service to adequate levels as
  quickly as possible, and within three months, including: 
  - a) the metrics HMRC will use to
  monitor its customer service performance, including metrics it
  needs to demonstrate it can answer calls and deal with post in a
  timely manner; 
  
 
  - b) the level of customer service
  taxpayers and their agents can expect to receive over the next
  three years against each of these performance
  metrics;  
  
 
  - c) how it will support customers
  who are unable to engage digitally or have a preference for post
  or telephone contact; and 
  
 
  - d) its contingency arrangements if
  its plans to reduce demand for traditional channels are
  unsuccessful or take longer to implement. 
  
 
  - 
    HMRC has further to go until it can differentiate
    between taxpayers who are genuinely struggling, and those who
    can afford to meet their liabilities but are choosing not
    to. Total tax debt in August 2022 was £46 billion,
    less than at the height of the pandemic in March 2021, but
    significantly higher than before the pandemic. HMRC’s data
    suggest that the tax debt has started to increase again as the
    economy slows down and taxpayers feel the effects of the
    cost-of-living crisis. HMRC has previously taken a standardised
    approach to debtors, but is now trying to vary its approach
    depending on whether a debtor is in genuine financial distress.
    This segmentation requires good data on the behaviour of its
    debtors, as well as sufficient capacity to take a tailored
    approach. HMRC has increased its debt management service by 700
    people and is experimenting with data from credit reference
    agencies to gain insights into its debtors. However, HMRC’s
    ability to understand debtors’ circumstances will be limited
    until it has completed its single customer account project,
    which will join up taxpayers’ records that are currently held
    in its different digital systems. 
  
 
  Recommendation: HMRC should set out how it will strike the
  right balance between providing support to taxpayers who need it,
  whilst ensuring that those able to meet their liabilities are
  doing so. HMRC should also set out when its single customer
  account will be ready and consider how it can bring the
  implementation of it forward. 
  - 
    Research and development tax reliefs are costly, prone
    to abuse and provide questionable benefit to the UK
    economy. The government has a target of 2.4% of GDP to
    be invested in research and development. In 2021-22, HMRC spent
    £9.5 billion on research and development reliefs, with
    expenditure having continued to grow year-on-year. HMRC told us
    that analysis it has undertaken demonstrates that these reliefs
    increase research and development investment, albeit marginally
    for small and medium-sized enterprises, but the benefit to the
    UK economy of that investment is not clear. Based on HMRC’s
    latest estimates, abuse of the reliefs cost the taxpayer £469
    million in 2021-22, though work to establish the true scale of
    the problem remains ongoing. Abuse of the small and
    medium-sized scheme is particularly worrying, with 7.3% of
    claims for relief estimated to be fraudulent or erroneous. HMRC
    has undertaken work to reconcile the £21.6 billion gap between
    HM Treasury and Office for National Statistics estimates of
    research and development expenditure, but discrepancies remain.
    HMRC is introducing new measures from April 2023 to strengthen
    its compliance approach and bear down on abuse of the
    schemes. 
  
 
  Recommendation: HMRC should develop its analysis of the
  additional research and development expenditure its relief
  schemes result in, to consider what impact that expenditure has
  on the UK economy. HMRC should report to the Committee on its
  findings within 12 months.