The drop in civil inquiries by fraud unit sparks criticism that the authority’s use of its powers of enforcement are waning

The number of civil investigation cases opened by a HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) fraud unit investigating offshore, corporate and wealthy taxpayers has fallen by more than half in five years, figures reveal.

The Observer reported last month that HMRC has not charged a single company under landmark legislation to crack down on tax evasion. Campaigners warned that HMRC was undermining its own deterrents by failing to use its criminal enforcement powers.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Is Kamala Harris’s Fashion Her Secret Weapon?

A FASHION formula emerged for ambitious female lawyers somewhere between the fraught…

Evicted Chagos Islanders’ descendants to get British citizenship

Home Office announces applications for children of those forcibly evicted by the…

The Guardian view on Sunak’s task: build a society fit for industrial change | Editorial

Post-Covid, the state can help workers find new jobs in blossoming sectors…

Energy firms seeking Whitehall loans paid £200bn to shareholders since 2010

Oil and gas companies should face a windfall tax to keep down…