Market leading insight for tax experts
Subscribe
Home
Saved articles
Viewed articles
Login
Logout
E-newsletter
About us
Help
View online issue
BROWSE BY TOPIC
Corporate Taxes
Compliance
Corporation tax
DPT
Groups
Transactional tax
Employment taxes
Employment taxes
Termination payments
Indirect Taxes
Customs & Excise duties
Environmental taxes
IPT
VAT
International Taxes
BEPS
CFCs
Cross border
Double tax relief
Foreign profits
Residence
Transfer pricing
UK competitiveness
Withholding taxes
Private Business Taxes
OMBs
Partnerships
Private Client Taxes
CGT
IHT
Pensions & investments
Trusts & estates
Real Estate Taxes
Property taxes
REITs
Stamp Taxes
SDLT
SDRT
Tax policy & administration
Anti-avoidance
Appeals
Brexit
Compliance
HMRC Powers
Investigations
Litigation
Tax policy
Tax risk
NEWS
CASES
IN BRIEF
ANALYSIS
ONE MINUTE WITH
PEOPLE & FIRMS
TRACKERS
AUTHORS
ISSUE ARCHIVE
BROWSE BY TOPIC
Corporate taxes
Compliance
Corporation tax
DPT
Groups
Transactional tax
Employment taxes
Employment taxes
Termination payments
Indirect taxes
Customs & Excise duties
Environmental taxes
IPT
VAT
International taxes
BEPS
CFCs
Cross border
Double tax relief
Foreign profits
Residence
Transfer pricing
UK competitiveness
Withholding taxes
Private business taxes
OMBs
Partnerships
Private client taxes
CGT
IHT
Pensions & investments
Trusts & estates
Real estate taxes
Property taxes
REITs
Stamp taxes
SDLT
SDRT
Tax policy & administration
Anti-avoidance
Appeals
Brexit
Compliance
HMRC Powers
Investigations
Litigation
Tax policy
Tax risk
Subscribe
Home
Saved articles
Viewed articles
View virtual issue
View online issue
Login
Logout
E-newsletter
About us
Help
News
Cases
In brief
Analysis
One Minute With
People & Firms
Trackers
Authors
Issue Archive
SEARCH
Home
Labour Party
Home
Labour Party
LABOUR-PARTY
The new Labour government: challenges and opportunities
Bezhan Salehy
David Gauke
David Gauke and Bezhan Salehy (Macfarlanes) share their Treasury insights on
the practical challenges facing the new administration.
Self's assessment: fiscal straitjackets
Heather Self
In this series, Heather Self examines tax issues in the headlines of the national press. This week, she examines the tax promises in the manifestos of the two major political parties - which are perhaps more notable for what
the parties say they won’t do, rather than what they will.
General Election 2024: tax in the manifestos
Liz Hudson
Jane Duncan
Liz Hudson and Jane Duncan (Evelyn Partners) report the tax policies of
the main parties – with additional comment from the IFS and Tax Policy
Associates.
The taxation of carried interest: where are we now?
Ben Symons
The taxation of private equity executives has become highly politically contentious as we head into the next election. An Opposition policy costing document released in February this year (bit.ly/4dol4do) shows that the Labour Party plans to tax the...
Non-dom reform: the proposals
Rebecca Sheldon
Rebecca Sheldon (Old Square Tax Chambers) considers the proposals from the Conservative Party that give a broad indication as to how the new regime is intended to operate, and what might be expected if the Labour Party wins the General Election.
The post-election (anti-avoidance) enforcement landscape
Ross Birkbeck
With an estimated tax gap of some £36bn, Labour does seem to be taking enforcement seriously, writes Ross Birkbeck (Old Square Tax Chambers).
Wealth tax possibilities
Philip Simpson KC
It cannot be ruled out that Labour’s current policy will not change, writes Philip Simpson KC (Old Square Tax Chambers).
Labour’s tax plans: aiming at the wrong target?
James Quarmby
Is Labour’s diagnosis of the tax gap accurate and has the party misjudged
its non-dom proposals, asks James Quarmby (Stephenson Harwood).
Tax in the manifestos
Stuart Adam
The three main political parties offer voters starkly different choices on tax, writes Stuart Adam of the IFS.
Self's assessment: will Labour make the tech giants pay their ‘fair share’?
Heather Self
In our continuing series, Heather Self examines the tax headlines in the national media. This week, the Labour party’s proposed tax raid on the tech companies.
Go to page
of
3
EDITOR'S PICK
Tax Journal's 2024 Autumn Budget coverage
1 /7
Derivatives, repos and stock loans: an overview
Matthew Mortimer
,
Tamar Ruiz
2 /7
Lost the battle but winning the war? The Supreme Court’s decision in PGMOL
Georgia Hicks
3 /7
Freebies
David Whiscombe
4 /7
Time is tight: CGT and the Autumn Budget
Peter Rayney
5 /7
What does the future hold for US adoption of the OECD’s two-pillar proposals?
Donald L. Korb
,
Andrew Solomon
6 /7
The emergence of a ‘new’ fixed establishment threshold for VAT grouping: insights from Barclays
Philippe Gamito
7 /7
Tax Journal's 2024 Autumn Budget coverage
Derivatives, repos and stock loans: an overview
Matthew Mortimer
,
Tamar Ruiz
Lost the battle but winning the war? The Supreme Court’s decision in PGMOL
Georgia Hicks
Freebies
David Whiscombe
Time is tight: CGT and the Autumn Budget
Peter Rayney
What does the future hold for US adoption of the OECD’s two-pillar proposals?
Donald L. Korb
,
Andrew Solomon
The emergence of a ‘new’ fixed establishment threshold for VAT grouping: insights from Barclays
Philippe Gamito
NEWS
Read all
HMRC manual changes: 22 November 2024
Tax increases in Scotland could have led to falling revenue, says IFS
NICs Bill published
Making Tax Digital: late-payment penalty anomaly corrected
Energy security investment mechanism: average prices
CASES
Read all
R (oao Refinitiv Ltd and others) v HMRC
Generator Power Ltd v HMRC
Other cases that caught our eye: 22 November 2024
Syngenta Holdings Ltd v HMRC
The Executors of K Beresford v HMRC
IN BRIEF
Read all
Self’s assessment: Reforms to APR
Greater taxpayer success under internal HMRC reviews
Can a compromise on APR be achieved?
Autumn Budget 2024: IHT winners and losers
Corporate redomiciliation
MOST READ
Read all
Syngenta Holdings Ltd v HMRC
Finance Bill 2025 published
Autumn Budget 2024: IHT winners and losers
Apprenticeship Levy and Employment Allowance: new employer guidelines
R (oao Midlands Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust) v HMRC