Techie taxman

THE taxman is set to use cutting edge internet technology to catch VAT defaulters, private tutors and e-marketplaces in campaigns being launched over the next year,

HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) will use tools such as ‘web robot’ software to find targeted information about specified people and companies. The department can pinpoint more accurately people who have failed to pay the right tax.

The ‘web robot’, used with the department’s Connect computer system, also helps find people who are trading without telling HMRC.

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Connect alerts HMRC to previously invisible tax evasion by matching a vast amount of HMRC and third-party data, enabling a fast and focused response to tax evasion.

It shines a light onto previously hidden relationships, uncovering anomalies between such elements as bank interest, property income and lifestyle indicators before homing in on unexplained inconsistencies.

Before designing and launching the campaigns, the department will seek input from interested parties.

HMRC announced last month that a campaign targeting VAT rule-breakers trading above the £73,000 turnover threshold but who have not registered for VAT will be launched in the summer.

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Other campaigns that will be launched in 2011/12 will focus on:

l Those who provide private tuition and coaching.

l E-marketplaces. This will cover those who are using e-marketplaces to buy and sell goods as a trade or business and who fail to pay the tax owed. People who only sell a few items and who are not traders are unlikely to be liable to tax and will not be targeted by this campaign.

l Trades. This will build on HMRC’s plumbers’ campaign and give an opportunity to another group of tradespeople to come forward and declare unpaid tax.

Mike Wells, HMRC’s director of risk and intelligence, said: “We want to make sure HMRC listens to as many informed views as possible for our future campaigns. We want the views and experience of people and organisations outside the department to play a fuller part in the campaigns that we design for customers.

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“By being open about our areas of interest for the coming year we hope to maximise that exchange of information and ensure we reduce the tax gap and help customers pay what they owe.

“We will use the information we gather to pursue people who choose not to use the opportunities we provide for them to put their affairs in order on the best possible terms. It will be more expensive if we come and find people, so I urge them to come forward and disclose voluntarily.”

l Information on campaigns for 2011, including how people can work with HMRC to influence their development, will appear on www.hmrc.gov.uk/ris/hmrc-campaigns.htm

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