Would you use a tax avoidance scheme?

Simon Ward
by Lovemoney Staff Simon Ward on 21 June 2012  |  Comments 53 comments

Following revelations that comedian Jimmy Carr used an offshore company to slash his tax bill, we want to know your thoughts on the morals of legal tax avoidance.

Would you use a tax avoidance scheme?

Comedian Jimmy Carr has issued an apology after it was revealed his earnings were being paid via an offshore tax avoidance scheme.

An investigation by the Times newspaper revealed that Carr’s income was put through a Jersey-based company, K2, which then paid him in the form of tax-free loans.

Prime Minister David Cameron waded into the row, saying it was “morally wrong”.

In a series of tweets, Carr wrote: "I met with a financial advisor and he said to me: "Do you want to pay less tax? It's totally legal." I said: "Yes." I now realise I've made a terrible error of judgement."

HMRC says the K2 scheme is now under investigation.

There are separate allegations that three members of Take That – Gary Barlow, Howard Donald and Mark Owen – invested millions of pounds in a music industry scheme that helped them avoid paying tax.

There have also been stories about several groups of senior civil servants and consultants being paid via private companies, rather than through the Government payroll. Some have been accused of using this method to lower their tax bill.

But, if you could, would you use a legal tax avoidance scheme to lower your tax bill? Or do you think it's morally wrong? Vote in our poll below.

In March, Chancellor George Osborne called “aggressive” tax avoidance “morally repugnant” and announced the Government would be introducing a rule to stop it.

However, some tax experts doubt whether this will have the desired effect. One unnamed tax avoidance tax expert told the Times: "It’s a game of cat and mouse. The revenue closes one scheme, we find a way round it."

More on tax

Six easy ways to pay less tax

How to make sure you’re on the right tax code

Top tax havens for babies, children and teens

How the taxman could be misleading you

How a Robin Hood tax would benefit you

Enjoyed this? Show it some love

Twitter
General

Comments (53)

  • Arblaster
    Love rating 40
    Arblaster said

    pfr said: "The only remedy is to introduce a tax system which is impossible to avoid or evade..." They already have one, and they are using it already. The government does not need to collect tax at all: all they have to do is inflate the currency.

    Report on 28 June 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • lordswood
    Love rating 1
    lordswood said

    Certainly would, if only I had enough money to pay tax on!

    Report on 24 July 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

Post a comment

Sign in or register to post a reply.

Our top deals

Credit card
company
Balance transfers rate and period Representative
APR
Apply
now

Barclaycard 27Mth Platinum Visa

0% for 27 months (2.98% fee) Representative 18.9% APR (variable) Apply
Representative example: assumed borrowing of £1,200, representative 18.9% APR (variable). Purchase rate 18.9% PA (variable). BT fee reduced from 3.9% to 2.98% (T&Cs apply).

Barclaycard 26Mth Platinum Visa

0% for 26 months (2.47% fee) Representative 18.9% APR (variable) Apply
Representative example: assumed borrowing of £1,200, representative 18.9% APR (variable). Purchase rate 18.9% PA (variable). BT fee reduced from 3.5% to 2.47% (T&Cs apply)

NatWest Platinum MasterCard

0% for 26 months (2.65% fee) Representative 18.9% APR (variable) Apply
Representative example: assumed borrowing of £1,200, representative 18.9% APR (variable). Purchase rate 18.95% PA (variable).
W3C  Thank you for using CGWEBLIV2