John Whiting, Chairman of the CIOT’s Management of Taxes Committee, says: “One can understand the driving force at work here but there is also an important matter of tax principle. A taxpayer will, under the proposed non-domiciled rules, be given an option over two bases of taxation. Yet someone choosing one route is, seemingly, to be handed an extra penalty. It does seem a bad precedent if making what might be regarded as the wrong tax choice attracts adverse treatment in another area.”
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For press information contact Simon Goldie on 020 7245 4122 (direct line). Email sgoldie@ciot.org.uk