Capital Taxes
Capital gains tax
(CGT) reform
The Chancellor surprised everyone with proposed
major changes to the CGT regime last October. The
changes affect individuals and trustees, but not
companies. The Chancellor has confirmed that
legislation will be introduced with effect from 6
April 2008 to give effect to a new single rate of
CGT at 18% but many business owners will continue to
have the potential benefit of a 10% rate.
An annual exemption will
remain in place and for 2008/09 this will be £9,600.
The annual exemption allows the first element of
gains made in a given tax year to be exempt from
CGT.
For gains arising on or after
6 April 2008 changes to the CGT regime include:
- the withdrawal of taper
relief
- the withdrawal of
indexation allowance
- the introduction of
Entrepreneurs’ Relief
- simplification of the
share identification rules.
Taper relief
Taper relief was introduced for disposals on or
after 6 April 1998 and can reduce the amount of the
gain chargeable to CGT. The amount of relief
available depends on whether the asset is classed as
a business or non-business asset and also on the
length of time an asset has been held since 1998.
For gains arising on or after
6 April 2008 taper relief will no longer be
available. The chargeable gain will be liable to tax
at 18%, after deducting allowable losses, any other
reliefs and the annual exemption.
Indexation allowance
Indexation allowance was, for individuals and
trustees, the precursor to taper relief and gave
relief for the effect of inflation on the costs
incurred on assets. Indexation was frozen as at 5
April 1998. Currently where an asset was held at 6
April 1998 and is disposed of after that date, any
gain on the disposal may be eligible for indexation
and taper relief.
For gains arising on or after
6 April 2008 indexation allowance will no longer be
available.
Entrepreneurs’ Relief
In response to business leaders voicing their
objections to the abolition of taper relief, the
Chancellor has introduced a new Entrepreneurs’
Relief. The main effects of this relief are:
- the first £1m of gains
qualifying for relief will be charged at an
effective rate of 10%
- gains in excess of £1m
will be charged at 18%
- an individual will be
able to make more than one claim for relief, up
to a lifetime total of £1m of gains.
The new relief is similar to
Retirement Relief, which was phased out with the
introduction of taper relief, but the new rules are
designed to be simpler:
- there will be no minimum
age limit
- relief will be available
where the relevant conditions are met for a
period of one year ending with the disposal /
cessation.
The relief will apply to net
aggregate gains arising on the disposal of:
- the whole, or part, of a
trading business that is carried on by the
individual, either alone or in partnership
- assets used in a
business which has ceased
- shares in a trading
company, or holding company of a trading group,
provided that the individual owns at least 5% of
the voting rights in the company and is an
officer or employee of the company
- assets used in a
partnership or by a company but owned by an
individual if the assets disposed of are
‘associated’ with a disposal of shares or an
interest in partnership assets. The individual
must make the disposal as part of the withdrawal
of the individual from participation in the
partnership or the company
- certain disposals by
trustees of business assets and company shares
where a ‘qualifying beneficiary’ has a
qualifying interest in the business / shares.
A trading business includes
professions but only includes a property business if
it is a ‘furnished holiday lettings’ business.
A trading company will have
the same meaning as currently applies for taper
relief.
Comment:
The introduction of Entrepreneurs’ Relief goes some
way to removing the problem of the 18% tax rate but
the Chancellor’s plan for a simple tax system has
evaporated. Considerable care will be needed in
planning to obtain the benefit of Entrepreneurs’
Relief. For example:
- the disposal of a
property used by an unincorporated business may
not qualify if it is not related to the disposal
of the whole, or part, of the business
- the disposal of shares
in a company may not get any Entrepreneurs’
Relief if the company has ‘substantial’
non-trading activities at the time of the
disposal of the shares
- the sale of a property
used by a company but owned by an individual
will only get relief if a number of detailed
conditions are satisfied. In particular some
shares in the company will need to be disposed
of at the same time as the sale of the property
- the conditions
imposed on trustee disposals may mean that some
trust structures which are attractive for IHT
saving may not qualify for Entrepreneurs’ Relief.
Entrepreneurs’ Relief
– transitional rules
A number of individuals have made a gain prior to 6
April 2008 and have deferred the gain until after 5
April 2008. Entrepreneurs’ Relief may be available
when the gain becomes chargeable if the sale of
shares in a trading company or the sale of an
unincorporated business would have met the
conditions for Entrepreneurs’ Relief if the sale had
taken place after 5 April 2008.
The deferred gains eligible
for relief are where:
- shares in a trading
company were disposed of in exchange for loan
notes in another company which are Qualifying
Corporate Bonds (QCBs)
- the gains made on shares
in a trading company or on the disposal of an
unincorporated business were reinvested in
Enterprise Investment Scheme shares or Venture
Capital Trust shares.
If an individual had shares
in a trading company which were disposed of in
exchange for loan notes in another company which are
not QCBs, there may be Entrepreneurs’ Relief on the
disposal of the loan notes after 5 April 2008.
However the loan notes would need to be issued by a
trading company in which the individual owns at
least 5% of the voting rights in that company and
the individual is an officer or employee of that
company.
Simplification of the
share identification rules
The current rules for the identification of shares
and securities for CGT purposes require a complex
order of identification, which is dependent upon the
dates when the assets were acquired.
Due to the changes to taper
relief and indexation allowance, all shares of the
same class in the same company will be treated as
forming a single asset from 6 April 2008, regardless
of when they were originally acquired. However
certain anti-avoidance rules will remain.
Inheritance tax (IHT)
threshold
As previously announced the IHT nil rate band will
rise from £300,000 to £312,000 in 2008 and £325,000
in 2009.
Transferable nil rate
band
Transfers of property between spouses or civil
partners are generally exempt from IHT. This means
that if an individual dies and leaves some or all of
their property to their spouse or civil partner,
they may not have fully used their nil rate band.
The new rules allow any nil
rate band unused on the first death to be used when
the surviving spouse or civil partner dies. The
transfer of the unused nil rate band from a deceased
spouse or civil partner, irrespective of the date of
death, may be made to the estate of their surviving
spouse or civil partner who dies on or after 9
October 2007.
The amount of the nil rate
band available for transfer will be based on the
proportion of the nil rate band which was unused
when the first spouse or civil partner died.
Example:
On the death of a husband 10 years ago, none of his
nil rate band was used because the whole of the
estate was left to his wife. If the nil rate band is
£350,000 when the wife dies, it would be increased
by 100% to £700,000.
Comment:
This welcome change means that where the combined
estate of a married couple is below the two nil rate
bands (currently £600,000), wills can be kept simple
and allow transfer to the surviving spouse. Where
estates are already above the double nil rate band
consideration still needs to be given to utilising
some or all of the nil rate band on the first death.
Interest in
possession trusts
The IHT rules for interest in possession trusts (IIP)
changed in 2006 so that they became subject to rules
which previously only applied to discretionary
trusts.
The key effect of those
changes is that an IHT charge arises to an
individual on creation of such trusts during
lifetime and the trust is charged to IHT on
distributions and every 10th anniversary of the
creation of the trust. Previously the IIP trust was
not charged to IHT but on the death of the
beneficiary it was included in their IHT chargeable
estate.
The implementation of the
2006 changes was delayed for a transitional period
for IIP trusts in existence before 22 March 2006 to
enable trustees to reorganise such trusts without
incurring charges under the new rules. The deadline
for this transitional period has been extended to
5th October 2008.
It is also confirmed that the
‘transitional serial interest’ provision will apply
where the holder of an interest in possession trust
at 22 March 2006 becomes entitled to a new interest
within the transitional period. |