
Sharon Baynham
Articles
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Dec 4, 2024 |
kpmg.com | Tim Sarson |Sharon Baynham |YouTube. Opens
The Finance Bill, National Insurance Contributions Bill and Business Rates Bill are all making progress in the House of CommonsThe Finance Bill, NIC Bill and Business Rates Bill are all making progress in the CommonsKPMG in the UK›Insights›Progress on tax related Bills passing through ParliamentWe discussed the content of Finance Bill 2024-25 in the last edition of Tax Matters Digest. The Bill had its second reading in Parliament on 27 November 2024.
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Dec 4, 2024 |
kpmg.com | Sharon Baynham
The Treasury Committee questions senior officials on the work of HMRC, including how they plan to close the Tax GapMP’s examine the work of HMRC, focussing on the Tax Gap KPMG in the UK›Insights›MP’s question HMRC on ongoing work, focussing on the Tax GapDuring the General Election, Labour set out its plans to raise around £5 billion by the end of this Parliament by Closing the Tax Gap.
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Nov 20, 2024 |
kpmg.com | Tim Sarson |Sharon Baynham
The Finance Bill, containing draft legislation for many of the measures announced at the Autumn Budget, was published on 7 NovemberFollowing the Autumn Budget, the Finance Bill was published on 7 NovemberFinance Bill 2024-25 (sometimes referred to as the Autumn Finance Bill) was introduced to the House of Commons and given its first reading on 6 November 2024, following the agreement of the Budget Resolutions.
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Nov 6, 2024 |
kpmg.com | Paul Freeman |Sharon Baynham
What the Government’s roadmap tells us (or doesn’t) about the future of corporation taxWhat the Government’s roadmap tells us (or doesn’t) about the future of corporation taxPredictability, stability and certainty: these are the things which the Government’s newly published Corporate Tax Roadmap highlights as taxpayers’ priorities. Many businesses would warmly agree, but does the Roadmap deliver?
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Oct 30, 2024 |
kpmg.com | Tim Sarson |Sharon Baynham
KPMG in the UK›Insights›General Election 2024: What’s tax got to do with it? As the main political parties gear up for the 4 July General Election, we expect to see manifestos land any day now. What are the key challenges facing the UK economy? How will the winning party deal with their upcoming spending review and fiscal event? We have heard a lot about personal taxes, but what can we expect on corporation tax? And if we were in the Chancellor’s shoes, what would our big tax idea be?
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