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HMRC


It has been ten years since the merger of the Inland Revenue and Customs and Excise.  A root and branch review of HMRC is now needed to ensure we have a department that is fit for purpose, writes Jonathan Riley (Grant Thornton).

Gideon Sanitt (Macfarlanes) considers the decision in Ingenious Media and when HMRC may be excused from its duty of confidentiality.

HMRC’s Director General for Business Tax, Jim Harra, talks about the department’s plans to incentivise agents to provide a service which benefits them, their clients and HMRC itself

The penalty for late self-assessment filing needs rethinking. HMRC's recent discussion document looks promising, writes Paul Aplin.

A surge in revenue collected by HMRC’s affluent unit shows that the department is no longer focusing solely on the super-rich, according to a Pinsent Masons briefing

Practical clarity is needed on when HMRC is bound by its own guidance. A recent discussion paper is a useful starting point for timely debate, writes Rupert Shiers (Hogan Lovells)

Jennie Granger (HMRC) writes about the new approach of HMRC’s enforcement and compliance business.

Recent data suggests that if you think HMRC is wrong, there is a significant chance that it may be, says John Barnett (Burges Salmon)

Charlotte Brown (Quorum Tax Chambers) considers the FTT’s recent approach to resolving VAT disputes where HMRC refuses to issue an appealable decision

HMRC’s chief executive, Lin Homer, sets out the vision for the department for the year ahead

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