In the Autumn Statement 2023, the Chancellor set out plans for an
investment-led UK economy designed to boost productivity, create
jobs and increase growth.
As part of this, the Chancellor has announced that full expensing
will be made permanent. Full expensing is the biggest
business tax cut in modern British history worth over
£50 billion over the next five years – helping companies
toinvest for less.
Alongside the Autumn Statement, the Prime Minister outlined how
the government will take five long-term decisions to grow
the economy: reduce debt, cut taxes and reward hard
work, build domestic sustainable energy, back British businesses
and deliver world-class education.
What is permanent full expensing?
- Permanent full expensing (FE) allows companies to
continuously invest for less by allowing them to
deduct 100% of the cost of main rate plant and machinery from
their profits before tax. There is also a 50% allowance for
special rate plant and machinery.
- FE is an effective corporation tax cut worth over £50 billion
over the next 5 years. For every pound a company invests in plant
or machinery, their taxes are cut by up to 25p.
- This means that companies can deduct the entire cost of a new
asset from their profits straight away, rather than more slowly
over its lifetime.
- FE makes the UK’s plant and machinery capital allowance
regime the most competitive in the G20.
Why is the government introducing this?
- The UK has the lowest headline corporation tax rate in the
G7. Out of the G7 and since the introduction of the super
deduction – the predecessor to full expensing – in 2021,
investment in the UK has grown the fastest in the G7.
- Having the right plant and machinery is vital for businesses
to grow, but it’s also a major expense. Full expensing of plant
and machinery lowers this barrier to productivity by delivering
upfront savings on investment, freeing up cash for businesses to
invest in other things. Making full expensing permanent gives
businesses the confidence and long-term certainty that they need
to invest in the future.
- As part as of the wider set of measures outlined in the
autumn statement, FE is expected to help unlock growth
and productivity by boosting business investment by £20 billion a
year and getting thousands more people into work.
- Since Spring Budget, the government has been working with
industry to explore the case for extending full expensing to
plant and machinery that is purchased for leasing to others. This
Autumn Statement, the government confirmed it will be continuing
to consider this issue and will be launching a technical
consultation on draft legislation in due course.
What is plant and machinery?
- Most tangible capital assets used in the course of a business
are considered plant and machinery for the purposes of claiming
capital allowances. There is not an exhaustive list of plant and
machinery assets. The kinds of assets which may qualify for the
FE include, but are not limited to:
- Solar panels
- Computer equipment and servers
- Tractors, lorries, bulldozers, vans, forklift trucks
- Ladders, drills, cranes
- Office chairs and desks
- Electric vehicle charge points
- Refrigeration units
- Compressors
- Foundry equipment
- Some fixtures like kitchen and bathroom fittings and fire
alarm systems
Business groups called for this, the government
listened
- Over 200 companies and trade associations have now asked the
government to make full expensing permanent. This includes Make
UK, the Confederation British Industry (CBI), the Institute of
Directors (IoD), the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) and the
Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIoT) who have all made public
statements.
- The Confederation of British
Industry said in its Autumn Statement submission:
- “For business, where investment decisions can take years
to deliver and see returns, certainty that the policy will
continue beyond its current three-year window is critical ...
announcing a permanent regime now will allow FE to be
considered in investment plans, especially where the UK is
not the only option where the investment could be made.”
- The Institute of
Directors said in its Autumn Statement submission:
- “By June 2023, our data showed this policy (temporary FE)
had already had a measurable impact for those firms affected.
Of organisations that have capital budgets above £1 million,
around a quarter (22%) told us they have altered their
investment plans as a direct result of the policy. This
impact is particularly pronounced in the two government
priority sectors of ‘advanced manufacturing’ and ‘green
industries’ ...we call for the 100% capital expensing
introduced in the March 2023 budget to be made permanent.”
-
Make UK said in its
Autumn Statement submission:
- “The move towards more generous capital allowances these
past few years is a positive step for manufacturers, who
account for 17% of total business investment in the UK..
- The Institute for Fiscal
Studies in its Green Budget (Chapter 10):
- “The temporary nature of the full expensing policy is a
problem. The UK needs an investment-friendly tax system for
the long term, not just for the next three years. If the
policy ends up being temporary, it will have a significant
cost but little or no effect on the UK’s long-run capital
stock ... Our view is that making the current policy
permanent would be preferable to letting it expire – but this
is a finely balanced judgement."
- When FE was announced at Spring Budget 2023 the Chartered Institute of
Taxation:
- “As well as increasing incentives for business, FE will
be a welcome simplification. It gives the greatest
simplification to the business tax system out of all the
options considered by the government in their consultation
last year.”
History of the super-deduction and full
expensing
In March 2021, the former Chancellor announced the
super-deduction, the biggest two-year business tax cut in modern
British history, under which companies saved up to 25p in each
pound they invested. Then at Spring Budget 2023, the now
Chancellor introduced full expensing, a three-year capital
allowances policy which also delivered up to a 25p saving for
every £1 invested.
To provide certainty, when announcing full expensing, the
Chancellor was clear that his ambition was to make it permanent
when fiscal conditions allowed.
Today, the Chancellor has delivered on this by confirming he will
make full expensing permanent. Worth over £50 billion over the
next five years, full expensing is the biggest business
tax cut in modern British history.
Existing relief for companies: introduction to capital
allowances
- Capital allowances let taxpayers write off the cost of
certain capital assets against taxable income. They take the
place of accounting depreciation, which is not normally tax
deductible. Businesses deduct capital allowances when computing
their taxable profits.
- In translating its accounting profits into taxable profits, a
business is usually required to ‘add back’ any depreciation but
can instead deduct capital allowances.
- For example, a corporation tax paying company with accounting
profits of £1,000, depreciation expense of £200 and total capital
allowance claims of £300 would make the following adjustment:
- Add £200 (depreciation expense) to £1,000 (accounting
profits) = £1,200
- Deduct £300 (capital allowances) from £1,200 = £900
(taxable profits)
- Apply the appropriate tax rate, e.g. corporation tax at
19%: £900 x 19% = £171 tax due
- The main types of capital allowances are:
- Annual Investment Allowance (AIA) - £1 million per year
that is available for all businesses;
- First Year Allowances (FYA) – available in the
first year that the equipment was purchased covering plant
and machinery;
- Writing Down Allowances (WDAs) – available year on
year covering plant and machinery; and
- Structures and Buildings Allowances (SBA) - covering the
construction and renovation of non-residential structures and
buildings.
Full expensing– examples of businesses investing for
less
Example one
- A high-tech manufacturing company investing £100 million in
machinery in establishing a new factory to manufacture computer
parts.
- Under permanent full expensing the company can invest for
less by writing off all £100 million of expenditure in the year
incurred, reducing their Corporation Tax (CT) bill by up to £25
million that year.
- Without FE, they would have to write down more gradually at
the rate of 18% a year, reducing their first-year CT bill by up
to £4.5 million (25% of the £18 million deduction from taxable
profits). It would then take at least 11 years for their
remaining £82 million of expenditure to be written down by 90%
Example two
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Without permanent full expensing
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With permanent full expensing
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• A company spends £10m on qualifying assets
• Deducts £1m using the AIA in year 1, leaving £9m
• Deducts £1.62m using WDAs at 18%
Deductions total £2.62m – and a tax saving of 25% x
£2.62m = £655,000
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· The same company
spends £10m on qualifying assets
· Deducts £10 million
in year 1 using FE
Receives a tax saving of 25% x £10 million = £2.5 million
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