I noticed an article on the Sun's website earlier this week about VAT, and wondered what it was all about, since it seemed a very similar article to that knocking about in the run up to the Sefton case.
But it must have been in anticipation of this...
And I suspect the impetus for this has come from the same pressure group - read it carefully and it doesn't look like it's a planted story from Treasury sources, or whatever. (Although obviously the Treasury is quoted in the piece.)
That's not to say that it isn't in the pipeline, but I don't think she'll simply announce it in the same way they announce fuel duty rises in the Budget and it's more or less immediately priced into fuel.
If she announces anything I suspect it'll be something down the line a bit. After all, the strapline is a bit misleading here, because there already is 20 per cent VAT on all cab journeys, assuming VAT registration - it's the principal/agent thing that would need to change, which would probably entail changing the licensing legislation and the booking processes as well
Reeves plots ‘taxi tax’ as borrowing costs soarhttps://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/20 ... -taxi-tax/Chancellor expected to impose 20 per cent VAT on all cab journeys – punishing residents in rural areasRachel Reeves is poised to announce a VAT hike on cab journeys which will hammer residents of rural areas, industry insiders have warned.
Campaigners said the Chancellor would use her autumn Budget to unveil a “taxi tax” which would raise around £750m a year for the Treasury.
It comes after figures showed borrowing had hit record highs, excluding the Covid pandemic years, overshooting official estimates by £11.4bn between April and August.
Ms Reeves is expected to announce a slew of painful tax rises at her Budget on Nov 26 to fill a £50bn black hole in the national finances.
The taxi industry fears it could be one of the victims, with the Treasury currently considering proposals to impose 20 per cent VAT on all journeys.
Rural residents hammeredIndustry figures said that doing so would push up the cost of trips outside London, disproportionately impacting those who live in the countryside.
Michael Solomon Williams, from the Campaign for Better Transport, said: “Taxis and private hire vehicles are an important part of an integrated transport mix, especially for people who live in rural areas, can’t drive or need accessible door-to-door travel.
“The focus should be on making public transport more affordable and accessible – not taxing the services that fill its gaps, hiking prices and undermining connectivity.”
Under the current rules, taxi firms outside of London do not have to charge VAT on journeys because their drivers are classed as self-employed contractors.
Individual cabbies do not hit the required earnings threshold of £90,000 a year at which VAT liability kicks in, meaning that no tax is due to HMRC.
Uber, which does charge VAT, challenged the status quo and initially won a court ruling which would have forced other companies to pay the tax too.
At that point the Government launched a consultation on standardising the system by simply applying full VAT to all private hire vehicle journeys.
The initial verdict was overturned on appeal last summer and that decision was upheld by the Supreme Court in a landmark ruling handed down in July.
Treasury plans to go aheadBut despite the decision, ministers have confirmed that they are still considering going ahead with imposing a blanket 20 per cent VAT rate.
Earlier this month Dan Tomlinson, the exchequer secretary to the Treasury, said in response to a written question on the issue: “The Government continues to take this complex issue very seriously and recognises businesses’ need for certainty.
“The Government is carefully considering the wide range of views shared through last year’s consultation on the VAT treatment of private hire vehicles and will publish a detailed response soon.”
Treasury ministers have previously suggested a decision would be announced at the budget, saying in response to another question that “decisions on tax policy are taken at fiscal events in the context of overall public finances”.
Industry insiders said they had been told that the Chancellor planned to go ahead with the VAT raid and would announce it at the budget.
‘Breach of Labour manifesto’The Stop the Taxi Tax campaign, which has been set up to oppose the move, said that it would be a breach of Labour’s manifesto pledges.
A spokesman for the group said: “The Taxi Tax breaches Labour’s manifesto promise not to raise VAT. Not only that, it will hit those living in rural communities especially hard, who lack reliable and accessible public transport.
“We urge the Chancellor to stick to her promise, stop the The Taxi Tax and avoid dealing another blow to people in rural and isolated communities.”
Polling for the campaign, carried out by Strand Partners, found that seven in 10 voters were opposed to increasing VAT on cab journeys.
Almost six in 10 respondents living in rural villages said they would reduce their use of taxis if fares increased and half said they would find a 20 per cent rise unaffordable.
A Treasury spokesman said: “We take this issue very seriously and recognise its complexity. We are reviewing feedback from our recent consultation and will publish our detailed response shortly.”