The House of Commons took a little over two and a half hours on Tuesday to debate and pass a Finance Bill that has been reduced drastically from the original 135 clauses and 29 schedules to 63 clauses and 11 schedules (see table for details). Among the provisions dropped were those on making tax digital, corporate loss relief and interest deductibility, VAT in relation to fulfilment houses, and penalties for enablers of defeated tax avoidance schemes.
The decision to shorten the Bill, leaving most of the complex and controversial clauses until a post-election Finance Bill, was welcomed by CIOT president Bill Dodwell, who called it a ‘sensible, pragmatic approach from the government and opposition’.
At the start of the debate, the financial secretary to the Treasury, Jane Ellison, confirmed that the government would legislate for the remaining provisions ‘at the earliest opportunity, at the start of the new parliament’. Regarding making tax digital, the financial secretary said the government remains ‘committed to the digital future of the tax system’ and would ‘pursue those measures in a Finance Bill in the next parliament’.
The CIOT called for the government to make a ‘clear statement’ on whether the dropped measures would be re-introduced with their original timings, particularly those with an April 2017 start date, or whether some will have their introduction delayed until a later date.
A group of amendments were also agreed in relation to the remaining provisions. The main ones were:
The amended House of Lords version of the Bill, reduced to a mere 148 pages, is available at http://bit.ly/2n0zWoA.
The House of Commons took a little over two and a half hours on Tuesday to debate and pass a Finance Bill that has been reduced drastically from the original 135 clauses and 29 schedules to 63 clauses and 11 schedules (see table for details). Among the provisions dropped were those on making tax digital, corporate loss relief and interest deductibility, VAT in relation to fulfilment houses, and penalties for enablers of defeated tax avoidance schemes.
The decision to shorten the Bill, leaving most of the complex and controversial clauses until a post-election Finance Bill, was welcomed by CIOT president Bill Dodwell, who called it a ‘sensible, pragmatic approach from the government and opposition’.
At the start of the debate, the financial secretary to the Treasury, Jane Ellison, confirmed that the government would legislate for the remaining provisions ‘at the earliest opportunity, at the start of the new parliament’. Regarding making tax digital, the financial secretary said the government remains ‘committed to the digital future of the tax system’ and would ‘pursue those measures in a Finance Bill in the next parliament’.
The CIOT called for the government to make a ‘clear statement’ on whether the dropped measures would be re-introduced with their original timings, particularly those with an April 2017 start date, or whether some will have their introduction delayed until a later date.
A group of amendments were also agreed in relation to the remaining provisions. The main ones were:
The amended House of Lords version of the Bill, reduced to a mere 148 pages, is available at http://bit.ly/2n0zWoA.






