The House of Lords' Economic Affairs Committee has issued its report “The Powers of HMRC: Treating taxpayers fairly” dealing with HMRC powers and taxpayer safeguards.

The conclusion of the report, which runs to 67 pages, is that the increases in HMRC’s powers since 2012, particularly in respect of dealing with tax avoidance are “undermining the rule of law” and that the government’s approach “does not appear to discriminate effectively between the full range of behaviours and circumstances it describes as tax avoidance”.

As a result the Committee recommended a number of actions to be taken by HMRC including:

The release of this report closely followed a review by the House of Commons Public Accounts Committee (PAC) on HMRC’s performance for 2017/18 in which the PAC highlighted that:

Links to our guides:

Disguised Remuneration (subscriber guide)
A comprehensive guide to disguised remuneration and the loan charge.

Schedule 36 Information notices (subscriber guide)
A guide to when HMRC can issue an information notice under schedule 36 and how to appeal a notice.

Discovery assessments 
When can HMRC use their discovery powers and what should you do when they issue a discovery assessment?

How to appeal a tax penalty
Step by step guide to ensure that you appeal all the right things.

External links:

House of Lords Committee report: The Powers of HMRC: Treating Taxpayers Fairly

House of Commons committee of public accounts: HMRC’s performance in 2017–18