Trade body submits alternative capital gains tax proposals
The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) has come up with a series of alternative proposals to Chancellor Alistair Darling's plans to abolish the capital gains tax (CGT) taper relief.
The FSB has commissioned Ernst & Young's Chris Sanger, the original architect of the capital gains tax (CGT) taper relief scheme, to look at ways of mitigating the damage the Federation claims the plan to scrap the relief will wreak on businesses.
The organisation has submitted a comprehensive report to the Chancellor, who is expected to make a statement on CGT this week.
It says its proposals would mitigate the damage of the plan to scrap taper relief on CGT in April 2008, which it argues has "enraged the UK's 4.5 million-strong small business community".
The FSB argued that the country's entrepreneurial culture would be damaged and that small business owners planning to sell their businesses to pay for their retirement would see their tax bills rocket overnight.
The FSB has proposed a new Entrepreneurs' Relief, which would apply to owner-managers of small businesses as well as business angels. The proposals would:
- Provide a 50% relief on capital gains up to a limit of £750,000, which equates to an effective tax rate of 9%
- Make it easy to identify who would qualify for the relief
- Encourage serial entrepreneurship and prevent entrepreneurs from leaving the UK, which could in turn increase the overall tax take from them
- Simplify the capital gains tax system in line with the Chancellor's intentions.
John Wright, FSB National Chairman, said: "We're pleased the Chancellor has acknowledged the outrage in the small business community about the plans to abolish taper relief on CGT and welcome the opportunity to put forward some alternatives.
"Thousands of small business owners and investors in new business ideas would have suffered from the Chancellor's decision.
"Our proposals, produced in consultation with the UK's leading expert on CGT, would protect small business owners that have worked hard over many years to build up a business and want to sell it to pay for their retirement."
Wright said the plans "would also ensure that the investment in new business ideas that underpins the future of the UK economy could be maintained".