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Where Taxpayers and Advisers Meet
Guest Editorial: Why the PCS is Taking Industrial Action on 31 January
05/02/2012, by Mark McLaughlin CTA (Fellow) ATT TEP, Tax Articles - General
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Guest editorial contribution by Mark Serwotka, head of the Public and Commercial Services Union

Why We Are Taking Industrial Action on 31 JanuaryMark Serwotka by A Aitchison

As many taxpayers already know, 31 January is an important date in the tax calendar. Filing your online return can be stressful. But please spare a thought for the advisers who staff HM Revenue and Customs' telephone lines and enquiry centres.

They want to do a good job to help you. But as there are fewer of them working in fewer offices as a result of HMRC's misguided and damaging cuts programme, they're under increasing pressure. Already facing more enquiry office closures – announced just this week – to pave the way for 10,000 more job cuts by 2015, our members are also very concerned about creeping privatisation.

From next month two companies, Sitel and Teleperformance, are due to run year-long call handling trials in Lillyhall, Cumbria, and Bathgate in Scotland.

The 31 January strike is in opposition to these trials, which are unnecessary and set a dangerous precedent.

One year is plenty of time for the companies to get comfortable. One has been advertising posts as 'permanent' – and for several thousand pounds less than their civil service colleagues earn. Recent history is littered with examples of taxpayers' money being wasted on outsourcing to companies who sacrifice good service for profit.

If HMRC wants to trial new ways of working, the skills and scope exist in-house. Instead of making cuts and letting in the private sector, HMRC should invest in its staff and the vital services they provide for all of us.

We could then seriously tackle the tens of billions of pounds in tax that goes uncollected every year – largely not from the ordinary taxpayer, but from a minority of very wealthy individuals and organisations that avoid or evade paying their dues.

So if you are filing your return next Tuesday and can't get the help you need, please don't blame the staff who have taken the difficult decision to strike. They are trying to protect a high quality service for the tax years to come.

Mark Serwotka

Public and Commercial Services Union

About The Author

Mark McLaughlin is a Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Taxation, a Fellow of the Association of Taxation Technicians, and a member of the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners. From January 1998 until December 2018, Mark was a consultant in his own tax practice, Mark McLaughlin Associates, which provided tax consultancy and support services to professional firms throughout the UK.

He is a member of the Chartered Institute of Taxation’s Capital Gains Tax & Investment Income and Succession Taxes Sub-Committees.

Mark is editor and a co-author of HMRC Investigations Handbook (Bloomsbury Professional).

Mark is Chief Contributor to McLaughlin’s Tax Case Review, a monthly journal published by Tax Insider.

Mark is the Editor of the Core Tax Annuals (Bloomsbury Professional), and is a co-author of the ‘Inheritance Tax’ Annuals (Bloomsbury Professional).

Mark is Editor and a co-author of ‘Tax Planning’ (Bloomsbury Professional).

He is a co-author of ‘Ray & McLaughlin’s Practical IHT Planning’ (Bloomsbury Professional)

Mark is a Consultant Editor with Bloomsbury Professional, and co-author of ‘Incorporating and Disincorporating a Business’.

Mark has also written numerous articles for professional publications, including ‘Taxation’, ‘Tax Adviser’, ‘Tolley’s Practical Tax Newsletter’ and ‘Tax Journal’.

Mark is a Director of Tax Insider, and Editor of Tax Insider, Property Tax Insider and Business Tax Insider, which are monthly publications aimed at providing tax tips and tax saving ideas for taxpayers and professional advisers. He is also Editor of Tax Insider Professional, a monthly publication for professional practitioners.

Mark is also a tax lecturer, and has featured in online tax lectures for Tolley Seminars Online.

Mark co-founded TaxationWeb (www.taxationweb.co.uk) in 2002.

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