Keith Cocker
Established Member
The distinction between avoidance and evasion is clear. The problem is that to take advantage of legal avoidance you already have to be quite rich. So it’s fundamentally unfair.There is a fundamental difference - avoidance is legal and evasion not!
An example - ISA's were originally established to encourage saving, particularly for retirement. Any income or withdrawals are free of tax. Assume I have £10k to invest at a rate before tax of 5%.
The cash ISA generates £500 tax free interest. If I put the money in a normal savings account interest generated is also £500 but tax of £100 or £200 is charged (tax is either 20% or higher 40% rate).
Is avoiding tax through investing in an ISA rather than normal savings account illegal.
IMHO absolutely not. We should all have the freedom to organise our affairs as we see fit. I am not condoning evasion, but the definition of that which is illegal needs to be very clear.
It is the overly complex nature of the UK tax system which encourages efforts to avoid tax. IMHO a radical reform is required to simplify, rather than continually tweaking the rules in every budget.