Last year War on Want published a report revealing that Boots the Chemists — a fixture of most U.K. high streets — had dodged over £1 billion in the six preceding years since it was taken over by the Alliance group. War on Want have now sent a letter to HM Revenue and Customs (which we copy in full below), co-signed by me, TJN and others, requesting the tax authorities to investigate the use of Limited Liability Partnerships (LLPs) by Boots and other companies as a part of their tax avoidance strategies.
As the letter explains, HMRC appears to have allowed the use of LLPs to become an acceptable part of tax planning:
HMRC appeared to have allowed the practice of profit shifting to become embedded as ‘acceptable tax planning.'” The Subcommittee noted that HMRC estimates that 23,000 of the roughly 420,000 partnerships had a corporate member. Of those, almost one-half were partnerships consisting only of non-individual (corporate) partners. While this is a small percentage of the total number of partnerships, it is a very large number of entities that are designed for uses distinctly different than traditional partnerships of individuals.
In its submission to the Subcommittee, the Government noted that, in LLPs, “profits may be allocated to a low tax entity, such as a company, while individual partners taxable at higher income tax rates ultimately receive the benefit of those profits in low-taxed or even non-taxable forms.” The submission made by War on Want and Change to Win makes clear that a similar problem exists with all-corporate-member LLPs, except that the profits may be received by corporate entities in low or no tax jurisdictions, such as the Cayman Islands.
The AllianceBoots case study indicates the potential scale of revenue losses arising from the use of LLPs, but the government appears not to be taking action to either investigate Boots or other companies employing LLPs for tax avoidance purposes, or taking steps to determine whether the use of LLPs by Boots and others conforms with UK law. Hence the specific requests made in the letter for HMRC to take action:
(1) Whether HM Revenue & Customs will publish data about the prevalence of LLPs, all members of which are corporate entities and at least one is a foreign corporate entity?
a. Of those, how many have a foreign corporate entity based in a jurisdiction that is generally understood to be a tax haven or a financial secrecy jurisdiction?
(2) Whether HM Revenue & Customs is concerned about the marketing of tax avoidance schemes involving LLPs, all members of which are corporate entities and at least one is a foreign corporate entity?
(3) Whether HM Revenue & Customs has initiated any investigations into companies employing this form (ie LLPs in which all members are corporate entities, at least one of which is a foreign corporate entity) as a means of tax avoidance or tax evasion?
(4) Whether HM Revenue & Customs has undertaken, or will undertake, an investigation or other form of inquiry to determine whether Alliance Boots' use of LLPs conforms to UK law — and is within the spirit of those laws — as suggested by the Subcommittee?
a. If so, what is the time frame of that investigation?
The full letter is copied below:
Lin Homer, Permanent Secretary and Chief Executive
HM Revenue and Customs
100 Parliament Street
London, SW1A 2BQMay 30, 2014
Dear Ms Homer,
We write to request information from your office and to urge you to instigate an investigation into certain matters concerning the use of limited liability partnerships (LLPs) by multinational corporations for purposes that obscure the substance of economic activity and may result in tax avoidance.
The House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee sub-committee on the Draft Finance Bill recently examined measures affecting limited liability partnerships in this year's Draft Finance Bill. As a part of that inquiry, the Subcommittee received evidence from a variety of groups and individuals. We write to follow up on the submission made by two organisations, War on Want and Change to Win. A copy of their submission is attached.
As an initial matter, the Subcommittee concluded that, in the realm of LLPs, “HMRC appeared to have allowed the practice of profit shifting to become embedded as ‘acceptable tax planning.'” The Subcommittee noted that HMRC estimates that 23,000 of the roughly 420,000 partnerships had a corporate member. Of those, almost one-half were partnerships consisting only of non-individual (corporate) partners. While this is a small percentage of the total number of partnerships, it is a very large number of entities that are designed for uses distinctly different than traditional partnerships of individuals.
In its submission to the Subcommittee, the Government noted that, in LLPs, “profits may be allocated to a low tax entity, such as a company, while individual partners taxable at higher income tax rates ultimately receive the benefit of those profits in low-taxed or even non-taxable forms.” The submission made by War on Want and Change to Win makes clear that a similar problem exists with all-corporate-member LLPs, except that the profits may be received by corporate entities in low or no tax jurisdictions, such as the Cayman Islands.
The War on Want and Change to Win evidence charges that, as part of its leveraged buyout, the acquiring parties of Alliance Boots set up a series of LLPs, to which the ownership of its high street properties had been transferred, and which guaranteed its debt, and used a Cayman Islands partner to provide flexibility and a veil of secrecy to the whole business. The complex structure of Alliance Boots' property holding companies, with a tax haven-based partner, raises serious questions about how a multinational company is using the LLP form to obscure, and possibly divert, taxable income.
In light of this evidence, we write to enquire:
(1) Whether HM Revenue & Customs will publish data about the prevalence of LLPs, all members of which are corporate entities and at least one is a foreign corporate entity?
a. Of those, how many have a foreign corporate entity based in a jurisdiction that is generally understood to be a tax haven or a financial secrecy jurisdiction?
(2) Whether HM Revenue & Customs is concerned about the marketing of tax avoidance schemes involving LLPs, all members of which are corporate entities and at least one is a foreign corporate entity?
(3) Whether HM Revenue & Customs has initiated any investigations into companies employing this form (ie LLPs in which all members are corporate entities, at least one of which is a foreign corporate entity) as a means of tax avoidance or tax evasion?
(4) Whether HM Revenue & Customs has undertaken, or will undertake, an investigation or other form of inquiry to determine whether Alliance Boots' use of LLPs conforms to UK law — and is within the spirit of those laws — as suggested by the Subcommittee?
a. If so, what is the time frame of that investigation?Regarding the latter point, we strongly urge HM Revenue & Customs to bring an investigation into Alliance Boots' use of these LLPs and that HMT consider the attendant policy matters as it moves forward with reform of partnership structures. We are gravely concerned that these structures are being used to erode the British tax base and to shift profits to foreign jurisdictions that offer financial secrecy and low, to no, taxes.
We believe such an investigation is particularly timely given the Government's commitment to carrying out the OECD Base Erosion & Profit Shifting (BEPS) Action Plan. Private equity backed firms depend on complex structuring and massive debt to carry out their deals, and the BEPS Action Plan acknowledges that such structures lead to profit shifting through interest deduction. In the case of Alliance Boots, the company avoided an estimated £1.12 billion to £1.28 billion through interest deduction over six years. The BEPS plan aims to address this through either restrictions on “earnings stripping” or requirements for “allocation of interest” across a multinational group. The Government can demonstrate its commitment to participate fully in the BEPS Action Plan by investigating structures like the one described above and moving aggressively to limit debt interest deduction.
We hope to hear from you on this matter at your earliest convenience, particularly given the immediate relevance of these questions to the current Finance Bill.
Sincerely,
John Hilary, Executive Director, War on Want
Len McCluskey, General Secretary, Unite the Union
Richard Murphy, Director, Tax Research LLP
John Christensen, Executive Director, Tax Justice Network
David McCoy, Chair, MedAct
Nell Geiser, Associate Director of Retail Initiatives, Change to WinCC:
Rt Hon Margaret Hodge MP, Chair of the Public Accounts Committee
Jim Harra, Director General, Business Tax, HM Revenue and Customs
Fergus Harradence, Deputy Director, Corporate Tax, HM Treasury
I will await a reply with interest.
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What do you suspect may have been happening through LLPs?
Or are you just concerned that as you can’t see the detail there must be something nefarious going on?
We’d like to know
I suspect that HMRC will (quite rightly) say that they cannot comment on a particular taxpayer’s affairs, or the status of any investigations into them, simply because some individuals are curious.
It seems odd to go to these lengths if you don’t have any particular suspicions.
I have to say though that I’m not sure how you’d get income from UK property out of the UK tax net by using an LLP. It’s pretty much a text-book example of UK source income which is taxable in the UK regardless of the owner’s residence.
http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2014/may/10/take-that-stars-face-the-music-after-tax-avoidance-ruling
http://www.lawgazette.co.uk/law/society-warning-on-llp-tax-reform/5039698.article
https://www.crowehorwath.net/UK/news/New_consultation_launched_by_HMRC_on_LLP_and_partnership_structure_tax_rules.aspx
No smoke without fire……………………
Those three links are about mixed partnerships of individuals and companies, and so are completely irrelevant to this question, which is about purely corporate LLPs.
Unless you adopt the HMRC attitude, which seems to be verging on a simplistic “if you have an LLP you must be doing something dodgy”; I’m sure Richard would agree that is an unreasonable view.
If you have a corporate LLP I would not agree at all
I have always opposed them
And for good reason, I think
Cough
http://www.taxresearch.org.uk/Blog/2010/11/08/small-business-tax/comment-page-1/#comment-588382
A decidedly conditional cough if you think that’s evidence
No, I was just reminding you that I’d pointed out the same a while back.
Anyway, isn’t using a partnership where the partners hold 99% and 1% not really a partnership, just giving access to an LLP by meeting the 2 partner rule. That’s surely not Parliament intended?
I can find nothing that has ever said it is not within the spirit of the law
Can you?
Is the tax avoided calculated just on shareholder loan interest or all interest including bank debt?
If genuine third party loans and not back to back arrangements then only on shareholder loans
For your information – a Boots update:
American retail giant Walgreens bought a 45% stake in Alliance Boots in 2012
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2012/jun/19/pharmacy-walgreen-alliance-boots-merger
And now Walgreens is hoping to buy the other 55% in the next eight months so it can own Boots outright and merrily base itself in tax haven UK, thus avoiding tax in the US.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/retailandconsumer/10839955/Drug-store-chain-Walgreens-bids-for-early-Boots-takeover.html
Now where have I heard that before?
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/+/http://www.hmrc.gov.uk/manuals/bimmanual/bim72115.htm
I think inquiries of this specific type are valuable and should be part of an ongoing process.My only concern is that the signatories may be regarded as “the usual suspects” and brushed aside for that reason.
My feeling is that a campaign against Tax Havens needs to be similar to the abolition of the Slave Trade in the nineteenth century. Slave Abolitionists were of a mixed bunch, not all with perfect motives. And Britain did take the first unilateral action(it took the USA a Civil War to do so mind). So I think that although Left wingers can be initiators (if that makes them happy!), I think we need a broad coalition of Tax Haven abolitionists.
Write in and support it then
Stephen, I agree wholeheartedly with your comments.
Tax havens are a scourge – their very existence creates amongst other things an uneven playing field for trade.
Even if you can’t get behind the tax base erosion arguments, surely no one can dispute the above, unless you are a crony/monopolistic capitalist that wishes to combine abuse of tax havens with TTIP and TPP to wipe out the competition…