
Matt Bijarchi
Articles
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Feb 1, 2024 |
realbusiness.co.uk | Jill Taylor |Matt Bijarchi |Sebastian Duncan
Corporation tax is a significant financial burden for limited companies and other organisations in the UK. Depending on the profits made, up to 25% of profits over £50,000 need to be set aside to settle this bill with HMRC, but there are plenty of ways to reduce your corporation tax.
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Jan 30, 2024 |
realbusiness.co.uk | Jill Taylor |Matt Bijarchi |Amrit Sandhar |Rebecca Barnatt-Smith
We’re living in an era where digital transformation appears to be rapidly evolving virtually every industry, and the rapid emergence of advanced technologies like artificial intelligence and process automation may finally gain the opportunity to carry a lagging financial sector into the 21st Century.
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Jan 30, 2024 |
realbusiness.co.uk | Jill Taylor |Matt Bijarchi |Amrit Sandhar
By Jill Taylor, CEO & Co-founder of The HuPerson Project To have a conscience in business, and to be a conscious business leader, are seemingly similar terms. Yet are they? Somehow, we have collapsed the distinction between conscience and conscious, eclipsing an important difference. Investigating how these terms are different is crucial in developing a leader whose awareness becomes more inclusive, more flexible, and more responsive to the rapidly changing needs of business today.
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Jan 29, 2024 |
realbusiness.co.uk | Matt Bijarchi |Amrit Sandhar |Sebastian Duncan
VAT registered businesses will all have a unique VAT number assigned to them. If you can’t find your VAT number, there are plenty of ways to locate it. You can check your existing paperwork including VAT certificates or letters from HMRC relating to your VAT registration or ongoing accounts, you can call HMRC to check the details, or use your Government Gateway account to find the number in your online tax account.
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Jan 26, 2024 |
realbusiness.co.uk | Matt Bijarchi |Amrit Sandhar
The term “PAYE” stands for “Pay As You Earn” and refers to the system that employers in the UK use to deduct tax and National Insurance contributions from employees before paying their wages or salaries. Being paid under PAYE means that the responsibility for calculating tax and reporting it to HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) lies with the employer, rather than the employee having to complete annual self-assessment tax returns.
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