Barclays
was yesterday prevented from using two ‘highly abusive’ loopholes to dodge paying £500million of tax.
The British
banking giant – which recently signed a pledge not to engage in tax avoidance –
was ordered to cough up the cash by the Government.
It will
come as an embarrassment to Barclays and its multi-millionaire chief executive
Bob Diamond who is in line for a bonus of up to £10million.
Embarrassment: Barclays was yesterday prevented from using two 'highly abusive' loopholes to dodge paying £500million of tax |
Barclays,
which earlier this month unveiled £6billion of profits, has faced questions for
years about the amount of tax it pays.
The bank is
also disputing the amount of tax it should pay, saying the real figure should
be £200m.
The Treasury
yesterday accused an unnamed lender – understood by the Daily Mail to be
Barclays – of using two ‘highly abusive’ and ‘aggressive’ avoidance schemes.
More...
The
Government has now outlawed both loopholes. This is expected to earn it a
further £2billion in tax in future years that would otherwise have gone unpaid.
David
Gauke, exchequer secretary to the Treasury, criticised the bank for cooking up
the schemes, having pledged not to avoid tax under the Banking Code of Practice
on Taxation.
Bad news: The new development will come as an embarrassment to Barclays and its multi-millionaire chief executive Bob Diamond, pictured, who is in line for a bonus of up to £10million |
‘The
Government wants to ensure that the tax system is fair for all and we will not
allow those who seek to benefit from this aggressive avoidance to get an unfair
advantage,’ he said.
‘We do not
take today’s action lightly, but the potential tax loss from this scheme and
the history of previous abuse in this area mean that this is a circumstance
where the decision to change the law with full retrospective effect is
justified.
The
Government is committed to creating a competitive tax system and we have
brought in a range of corporate tax reforms, but we are absolutely clear that
business must pay the tax they owe when they owe it.’
The tax
dodges at Barclays came to light after they were disclosed by the bank to HMRC.
The first scheme involved the bank claiming it should not have to pay
corporation tax on profits made when buying back its own debt.
The second
involved claiming tax credits on non-taxable income in what the Treasury said
amounted to ‘an attempt to secure repayment from the exchequer of tax that has
not been paid’.
Barclays
yesterday declined to comment on the matter.
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